PRINCIPLES OF CLASSICAL PHILOLOGY
- Academic year
- 2019/2020 Syllabus of previous years
- Official course title
- ISTITUZIONI DI FILOLOGIA CLASSICA
- Course code
- FT0105 (AF:308589 AR:169994)
- Modality
- On campus classes
- ECTS credits
- 6
- Degree level
- Bachelor's Degree Programme
- Educational sector code
- L-FIL-LET/05
- Period
- 1st Term
- Where
- VENEZIA
- Moodle
- Go to Moodle page
Contribution of the course to the overall degree programme goals
Expected learning outcomes
- understand the basic philological terminology
- know the history of the concept and practice of philology, from the Alexandrian through the modern age
- know the basic tools for philological research in the field of Greek and Latin texts
Skills to apply knowledge and comprehension
- be able to use correctly the philological terminology when describing phenomena of textual transmission
- be able to situate historically the main developments of the philological method, and to situate chronologically the handwritten and printed witnesses of a given work;
- be able to situate the main series of critical editions, the main repertories, lexica, and encyclopedias in order to find one's way in the study of philology.
Judgment skills
- be able to ground and motivate a judgment of two or more textual variants
- be able to assess the contribution of a witness to the constitution of a text (primary / secondary; dependent / indepenent)
- be able to discriminate between direct and indirect tradition of a text.
Communication skills
- be able to outline the tradition of a text
- be able to express correctly the main features of a philological problem
Learning skills
- be able to consult the reference works on the history of philology and connect them with the study of texts and of the apparatus criticus
Pre-requirements
Contents
The second part of the course will be devoted to a brief illustration of some problems concerning the textual transmission of a Greek and a Latin author, and to the philological reading of selected passages.
Students not attending the course will follow the same syllabus (with the additional reading mentioned in the bibliography), and they will contact the teacher beforehand.
Referral texts
1) L. D. Reynolds - N. Wilson, Copisti e filologi, Padova, Antenore 1987 (2 ed.).
2) M.L. West, Critica del testo e tecnica dell' edizione, Palermo, L'Epos 1991.
Other material will be handed out to the students during the course.
Students (both those attending and those not attending the class) will have to prepare a translation and a philological commentary of a Greek and a Latin text:
1) Theocritus, Idyllia I, II, IV, XI, XIII, ed. C. Gallavotti (Roma 1993, 3a ed.)
2) Vergilius, Eclogae I, II, IV, VI, X, ed. S. Ottaviano (Bibliotheca Teubneriana, Berlin-NY 2013)
Further reading (mandatory for students not attending the class):
J. Delz, Critica testuale ed ecdotica, in F. Graf (ed.), Introduzione alla Filologia Latina, Roma, Salerno 2003, pp. 81-109.
E.J. Kenney, Testo e metodo. Aspetti dell'edizione dei classici latini e greci nell'eta del libro a stampa, edizione italiana riveduta a cura di A. Lunelli, Roma, Gruppo Editoriale Internazionale, 1995.
A. Momigliano, L'eredità della filologia antica e il metodo storico, in Id., Secondo contributo alla storia degli studi classici, Roma, Edizioni di Storia e Letteratura 1960, 463-480.
Assessment methods
- first the reading (oral translation and philological commentary) of passages from the two authors at issue: the student will display a basic familiarity with Greek and Latin, but above all his ability to interpret critically and gauge the variant readings reported in the apparatus criticus;
- secondly, some questions concerning the main issues related to the history of the transmission of classical texts, as well as to some key principles of ecdotics: the student will display his/her familiarity with the main features of the history of philology, and prove capable of assessing the age and the importance of some significant scholars and/or phenomena in terms of their cultural significance.