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Omeros

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Posts posted by Omeros

  1. I appreciate your reflections on the subject. 

    I'm glad to hear that Classics does value some interdisciplinary work, although I think that you confirm for me that some combinations are more valued than others. Personally, I think I'm left of even the cognitivist. The reduction of Classics education to grammar is frankly numbing. Apologies if that is offensive to anyone. But the historical contraction of Classics to an adjunct of linguistics or to the articulation of grammar - along with the professional bag-checking of everyone's grammatical facility - is dispiriting from a research side. (Yes, grammatical facility is paramount, but that has become the end and not the means). There's only one person outside of a Comparative Lit program that does anything close to what I'm interested in, and I have been told that he is discouraging his dissertation students from following in his interdisciplinary foot-steps. 

    That said, I may not even do a PhD - or a Masters - at this point.

    With Trump president and a Republican controlled Senate and House - and a vulnerable, de-regulated market - I'm not sure if its prudent to do anything else but work while I can. 

     

  2. Does anyone know how much of a pay scale difference there is between teaching Latin with a Bachelor's VS teaching with a Masters? 

    Because the US has begun its collapse, I'm considering skipping the M.A. and just finding a job teaching Latin at a high school. 

    I know that there's a difference in pay for advanced degrees, but I'm not sure if its substantial enough to remain for an M.A. 

    Does anyone have any insight into this? 

     

  3. Many thanks to both of the replies. I appreciate the nuts and bolts insight into both the PhD and terminal M.A. programs. 

    I'm not going to take out loans to complete an M.A., so I'm glad to know up-front that some programs may have the unrealistic expectation that I might. I'd happily skip the M.A. but I just imagine that I would struggle doing both Latin and Greek (and prepping for German and Italian) at an especially expeditious clip. 

    I would be interested to hear what programs value interdisciplinarity. Apart from Comparative Lit programs, I haven't turned any that would support my intersection of interests. 

     

     

     

  4. On 11/5/2016 at 0:35 PM, pro Augustis said:

    I am posting this with some hesitancy, as I don't want to appear to be disparaging other disciplines. I would think carefully about the job market though. When I was applying, I debated between Classics and History graduate programs. My advisor told me to go for the former because while a History department might hire a Classics graduate, a Classics department would almost certainly assume that such a graduate lacked the proper philological training. Comp Lit may be different, but it's something to keep in mind—if you want to end up in a Classics department for teaching, it won't be easy if you haven't begun there. 

    I appreciate the comment and feedback. I am in the same situation and have received similar advice. Classics itself is too conservative for my research interests, so I'm at a cross-roads. Frankly, I'm not sure what I should do. 

  5. 13 hours ago, Glasperlenspieler said:

    Their website seems to say otherwise: "Comparative Literature “classics” majors are expected to study Latin and Greek and one modern language in lieu of the two modern / one classical requirement." (http://complit.princeton.edu/graduate-program/program-requirements)

    I appreciate you pointing this out. I didn't look past the initial program description after I saw the first modern/ancient requirement. I would never have seen this.  

  6. I am an undergraduate at a state school interested in doing a PhD in Classics, but feel that I need to do a terminal M.A. 

    My Latin will be better than my Greek but I didn't start Latin in high school, so I feel at a disadvantage. I also have multidisciplinary interests, which I think is disadvantageous.

     I have looked at most (if not all) of the M.A. programs and have strong interests in some. Specifically, Tulane, Univ. of Arizona, Washington & Louis and Notre Dame.

    For those that can speak to any of the above (or omitted): Are funding packages livable? What do you like and dislike? What do you wish you had known? Do I have to read Thucydides? 

     

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