Homer's Iliad: Book 3, The Duel for Helen

Homer's Iliad: Book 3, The Duel for Helen

*Please note that this course will run only if two or more students enroll.

Course Description: The Trojans and the Greeks make an agreement to settle their differences without prolonging the war any longer, opting for a duel to the death between Menelaus and Paris for Helen. Aphrodite, however, has other plans. In this Greek reading course, we will cover all of book 3 of the Iliad and some of book 4 (about 570 lines total). While this is an ongoing Homeric reading group, new participants are always most welcome.

DETAILS

Level: This course is intended for participants with upper-Intermediate to advanced reading knowledge of Ancient Greek.

Textbook: Instructor will provide materials. Recommended: M.M. Willcock, Homer: Iliad I-XII (Bristol Press, 1998).

Sections capped at: 5 students. If the course is sold-out, please fill out this waiting-list form.

When
Tuesdays, 8:30p.m. EST

Cost
$250

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Instructor

Marcello Lippiello

Marcello Lippiello has been participating in the Telepaideia program since its inception over a decade ago. In his 8 years as an instructor for Paideia, he has accumulated well over 1000 hours of live video instruction experience, covering a range of topics, from introductory courses for both languages (using a variety of textbooks) to reading courses in Homer and the New Testament, to practice groups for advanced speakers of Latin.

He was born and raised in the Bronx, New York, where he received his B.A. in Classical Languages and Theology from Fordham University. He has long had an interest in conversational Latin, earning a Graduate Certificate in Latin Studies from the University of Kentucky's Institutum Studiis Latinis Provehendis in 2005, along with master's degrees in classical languages and classical studies from Kentucky and from Duke University. He is also a two-time alumnus of Paideia's Living Greek in Greece Program (where he played Tiresias in the Bacchae), and has participated in many other conversational Greek and Latin workshops through the University of Kentucky, the Polis Institute, and through SALVI, such as the Synodos Hellenike and Rusticatio. He has taught undergraduate college courses in all levels of Latin and Greek at several institutions, including Christendom College in Virginia and the Pontifical College Josephinum in Ohio. He lives with his family in Danbury, Connecticut.