Visiting Assistant Professor Blume
Classics is the study of ancient Greece and Rome, in particular the ancient Greek and Latin languages and literatures. Classics majors and minors study ancient Greece and Rome through direct access to the rich tradition of Greek and Latin literature in a variety of genres: epic, lyric and elegiac poetry; tragedy and comedy; ancient history and philosophy; classical mythology and religion.
Classics at Ohio Wesleyan has a long tradition that dates back to the very founding of the college in 1842. Advanced courses in Virgil; Homer; Tacitus; Sophocles; Horace; Pindar; Lucretius; Aeschylus (and many others) are offered alongside surveys of Roman Republican and Imperial history and literature; Greek literature and thought; and the hallmark of Classics at Ohio Wesleyan: small tutorials and independent studies on a variety of classical topics. Classics hosts a chapter of the national Classics Honor Society, Eta Sigma Phi.
Classics majors are well trained for a variety of career and lifetime pursuits; the Classics program at Ohio Wesleyan regularly sees its alumni/ae admitted to graduate programs in Classics, and has a rich tradition of scholarship and creative endeavors; Classics students are regularly afforded the opportunity to collaborate on scholarly projects with Classics faculty and to assist in cooperative research. Classics majors will often double major in another discipline; they are given a sound training in skills of critical reasoning and the rigor of close, careful analysis that makes Classics an attractive option either as a standalone major or in combination with another (especially for those interested in careers in law and medicine).
Classics students also have the ability to apply to study in Greece and Italy; they are introduced to a vibrant series of lecturers from top Classics programs who visit Ohio Wesleyan to deliver lectures in Classics. In short, Classics majors and minors are able to engage with the rich and varied treasures of the noble traditions of the ancient Greeks and Romans that stand at the very heart of western civilization.