List of texts to be used for Professor Trzaskoma's CLAS 401 course in Spring 2004.

Greek Tragedies (vol. 1), ed. by Grene and Lattimore (University of Chicago Press). Contains: Aeschylus' Agamemnon and Prometheus Bound, Sophocles' Oedipus the King and Antigone, and Euripides' Hippolytus.

The Essential Homer, translated by S. Lombardo (Hackett).

Hesiod, Works and Days, Theogony, translated by S. Lombardo (Hackett).

Course reader, Anthology of Classical Myth, (available at Durham Book Exchange)

All books are available in Durham at the Durham Book Exchange. I've tried to pick common editions and ones with lots of used copies in circulation, so it shouldn't be a problem unless you do your book shopping in the Australian outback.

NOTE: These books were the same as those used for last semester, so there should be plenty of used copies around. Please note, however, that last semesters course reader is NOT the same as this semesters. You will need to purchase one from the Durham Book Exchange.

If you prefer shopping online and Amazon.com is your poison of choice, you can use the links below to each of the required texts for CLAS 401 (Fall 2003). Be aware that if you use these links & make a purchase, Amazon.com will kick back some small percentage of their profit to me, which will be used to defray the costs associated with this website (server space, domain name registration, etc.). If everyone in the class uses them about 40 times and convinces all of their friends to use them at least 10 times, I think that might actually come close to covering the bills! Barnes and Noble and various other online services will have all of these in stock as well, so if you prefer to go somewhere else, you're more than welcome to.

coverGreek Tragedies (vol. 1), ed. by Grene and Lattimore (University of Chicago Press). Contains: Aeschylus' Agamemnon and Prometheus Bound, Sophocles' Oedipus the King and Antigone, and Euripides' Hippolytus.

coverHomer, The Essential Homer, translated by S. Lombardo (Hackett).

coverHesiod, Works and Days, Theogony, translated by S. Lombardo (Hackett).

If there's something else you're looking for and you have an odd desire to put a few pennies into classicalmyth.com, you can also use the following general search engine for Amazon.com.

Search:
Keywords:
In Association with Amazon.com
In affiliation with Amazon.com

 


Home

Copyright and disclaimer © 2000–2003, Stephen M. Trzaskoma