Metadata
Title
CLASSICS FACT SHEET
Category
courses
UUID
028346001b5145d5b1bc901b72178835
Source URL
https://artsci.washington.edu/academics/humanities/classics/fact-sheet
Parent URL
https://artsci.washington.edu/academics/arts/art-arthistory-design/fact-sheet
Crawl Time
2026-03-23T10:47:59+00:00
Rendered Raw Markdown

CLASSICS FACT SHEET

Source: https://artsci.washington.edu/academics/humanities/classics/fact-sheet Parent: https://artsci.washington.edu/academics/arts/art-arthistory-design/fact-sheet

UW students in the Roman Forum.

Classics concerns itself with the languages and cultures of the ancient Greeks and Romans, whose civilizations had a central role in shaping the basic conceptual categories of our present cultural, intellectual, professional, and civic lives. Study of Classical languages and cultures fosters broad and deeply informed critical perspectives on the human experience and develops excellent analytical, problem-solving and communication skills.

VISIT DEPARTMENT WEBSITE

HIGHLIGHTS

UW’s Department of Classics is known nationally and internationally as a place where innovative research, excellent instruction, and active mentoring of undergraduate and graduate students are ensuring the preservation and expansion of knowledge of the Classical world for the next generation.

Faculty and students work collaboratively with colleagues in most other humanities departments as well as colleagues in Art History; Gender, Women & Sexuality Studies; History; the Honors Program; Jewish Studies; Music; the Office of Minority Affairs and Diversity; Philosophy; the Simpson Center for the Humanities; and the UW Libraries. We also serve as a local hub for the teaching of Classics and offer engaging annual events for teachers of Latin and Classics at all levels.

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Undergraduate majors

EDUCATION

The humanities, with their critically informed and historically grounded explorations of fundamental human experiences, are integral to the public good. The Department cultivates a strong sense of stewardship and embraces opportunities to provide access to education in Classical languages and cultures as widely as possible.

The Department offers four undergraduate majors: Classics, Greek, Latin, and Classical Studies. The majors in Classics, Greek, and Latin emphasize the development of expertise in the Classical languages and literatures. The Bachelor of Arts in Classical Studies is for students wishing to explore the literature, history, art, archaeology, and philosophy of Classical Antiquity primarily through English translations. Undergraduate majors deepen and consolidate their explorations of the ancient world in a culminating project, the Senior Essay. Many of our graduates have gone on to become distinguished teachers and scholars; others have pursued successful careers in business, journalism, law, medicine, the arts, and a variety of other fields.

The Department’s graduate programs, leading to the MA in Greek, Latin, or Classics and the PhD in Classics, ensure comprehensive and thorough training in the disciplines needed for teaching and for producing original research in the field of Classics. Students may also do supporting work in other departments in such areas as ancient philosophy, ancient and medieval history, art history, literary theory, and linguistics.

The Department actively encourages and in many cases is able to provide financial assistance to students to participate in a study abroad program, including those sponsored by the Department or the University’s Study Abroad office as well as a variety of programs offered by organizations such as the American Academy in Rome and the American School of Classical Studies in Athens and archaeological excavations and field schools.

Students

Autumn 2023

Degrees Awarded

July 2022 - June 2023

Major Student Awards

Since 2021

FACULTY

Autumn 2023

Faculty Awards & Honors

Faculty bring a global perspective to the study of Classics, with numerous international collaborations. Faculty awards and honors include:

RESEARCH & SCHOLARSHIP

Faculty engage in critical analysis of texts, artifacts, and culture from across the whole range of ancient Greek and Roman civilization, including projects focusing on archaeological, art historical, topographical, historical, historiographical, philosophical, folkloric, and literary studies.

Recent faculty publications include the books Greek Slaveryand Helen of Troy in Hollywood and a diverse range of articles, including “Surgical Treatment of the Breast from the Hippocratics to the Renaissance,” “Myth and Mythopoeia in the Films of Yorgos Lanthimos,” “A Feminist Abolitionist reads Plutarch, Euripides and Plato: Periclean Athens and Nineteenth Century America in Lydia Maria Child’s Philothea (1836),” “Forgetting Germanicus: Reading Valerius Maximus through Tacitus’ Tiberian Books,” “Ovid’s Exile Poetry and Zombies,” “Curse Tablets,” “The Dreams of Barčin and Penelope,” “Vernae and Prostitution at Pompeii,” “Si est homo bulla: The Dystopian Political Didactics of Varro’s de Rebus Rusticis,” “Mythography and Greek Vase Painting,” and “The Contradiction of the ‘Hymn to Zeus’ in Nemean 3.”

Areas of Scholarship

ENDOWMENTS

OUTREACH

The Department’s activities that serve the local community include:

CONTACT

Department of Classics\ Box 353110\ University of Washington\ Seattle, WA 98195\ (206) 543-2266\ email: clasdept@uw.edu\ web: classics.washington.edu

last update:  November 2023