GREECE2003

 

GREECE 2003: THE UNIVERSITY
OF ARKANSAS

 

 

Illustration: Samaria Gorge in West Crete.

 

 

Professor of Classical Studies Daniel Levine will
lead a tour from the University of Arkansas to Greece for three weeks in
May and June of 2003. Details are not yet confirmed, but an outline of a
possible itinerary may be found below. The tour and subsequent written assignments
will award three hours of credit at the upper-division level. Only applicants
who are in good physical condition and good academic standing will be accepted
for this strenuous study tour. For information, read the material below,
and/or contact Professor Daniel Levine, Department of Foreign Languages,
Kimpel Hall 425, University of Arkansas, Fayetteville, AR 72701. Telephone:
479-575-5937. Email: dlevine@uark.edu

 

 

 

Click Here

 

for

 

Photographs of some happy moments
from the 2002 U of Arkansas trip to Greece…

 

 

Read the trip details below (also available from the University
of Arkansas Study Abroad Office Website: http://www.uark.edu/~studyabr/classics.htm)

 

 

Classics in Greece

 

 

May – June 2003

 

 

Program Description:

 

This course is a three-week study tour of Greece. Students will study
significant works of art and sites relevant to the history and culture of
Greece. To this end, we will visit important museum collections, and archaeological
sites in Athens and Attica, the Peloponnese, Crete, Boeotia, the islands
of Euboea and Melos, and the shrine of Apollo at Delphi. We will encounter
healing sanctuaries, pan-Hellenic game sites, Mycenaean citadels, Minoan
palaces, Byzantine churches, sacred caves, oracular sites, fortifications,
battlefields, and religious pilgrimage sites, such as Eleusis.

 

 

Course Offerings:

 

FLAN 4233 Culture and Civilization: Field Studies.

 

Students will attend several pre-trip meetings on the University
of

 

Arkansas campus to become familiar with the language of
Modern

 

Greece, as well as to prepare for giving reports on site.
Professors

 

will provide reading lists and report topic suggestions,
and will

 

work with students in preparation of these site reports,
which

 

students will prepare before departure. Each student will
present an

 

oral report on a topic related to the sites and artifacts
we visit

 

(graduate students will give two reports). Upon return,
students will

 

write a take-home examination, and, in consultation with
the

 

professor, write a short paper, due by the end of the second

 

summer session. Grades will be determined equally on the
basis of

 

the examination, oral reports, final paper, and participation
in all

 

activities. There will be a course webpage for participants,
with

 

important information on the tour, tips for reports, syllabus,
and

 

suggested readings.

 

 

Faculty:

 

Daniel Levine, Professor and Chair of Classical Studies,
University

 

of Arkansas ,

 

and

 

George Paulson (M.A.,Ancient Greek History; Ohio State University),
Fayetteville, AR

 

 

Accommodations:

 

Participants will stay in suitable hotels, double occupancy.

 

Breakfasts are provided.

 

 

Tentative Itinerary: (final dates may vary by 1-2 days

 

depending on confirmed airline schedule)

 

Day 1 Travel XNA-Athens

 

Day 2Arrive Athens

 

Day 3 Athens

 

Day 4 Eleusis/Aigosthena

 

Day 5 Peiraeus/Sounion

 

Day 6 Samaria Gorge

 

Day 7 Chania/Maleme

 

Day 8 Knossos/Irakleion

 

Day 9 Gortyna/Phaestos

 

Day 10 Mallia/Ayios Nikolaos

 

Day 11 Milos

 

Day 12 Milos

 

Day 13 Ferry to Piraeus

 

Day 14 Athens

 

Day 15 Marathon/Oropos/Eretria

 

Day 16 Thebes/Osios/Delphi

 

Day 17 Delphi/Corycian Cave

 

Day 18 Chlemoutsi/Olympia

 

Day 19 Olympia/Bassae

 

Day 20 Nauplion/Epidaurus/Tiryns

 

Day 21 Mycenae/Nemea/Corinth

 

Day 22 Athens

 

Day 23 Departure

 

 

The Program Fee will be around $3,220 plus UA Tuition

 

*Tuition is $334 (3 undergraduate hours)

 

This fee includes round trip airfare from XNA to Athens,
lodging

 

with breakfast, field trips, museum fees, international
health

 

insurance and administrative fee. Program fee does not include

 

lunches and dinners, books, passport fees, some local

 

transportation, and personal expenses.

 

*Tuition discounts are not allowed. Tuition is subject to

 

change by the University of Arkansas Board of Trustees prior

 

to the 2002 summer term.

 

 

Financial Aid:

 

Financial aid may be available, but students must apply
through the

 

Financial Aid Office at their home institution. A limited
number of

 

travel grants are available for University of Arkansas students.

 

Contact the UA Office of Study Abroad for application and

 

deadlines.

 

 

Eligibility:

 

Students must have a cumulative GPA of 2.4 with a minimum
of

 

24 hours. One academic recommendation from a faculty member

 

or academic advisor is required. Students who apply for
this course

 

must have a serious interest in studying the Mediterranean
world,

 

be in good health, and possess the ability to adapt to new
situations.

 

Having studied ancient language and culture will assist
a student’s

 

application. Confirmed participants will be expected to
attend all

 

informational and pre-departure meetings.

 

 

Further Information:

 

For further details about the program or course offerings,
please

 

contact Daniel Levine, Kimpel Hall #425, University of Arkansas,

 

Fayetteville, AR 72701 (501) 575-2951 or dlevine@uark.edu

 

 

Applications should be requested from the Office of Study
Abroad,

 

Fulbright Institute, 722 W. Maple,

 

http://www.uark.edu/~studyabr/classics.htm

 

Fayetteville, AR 72701 (479) 575-7582 or email the office:

 

studyabr@cavern.uark.edu

 

 

 

Application deadline and deadline for deposits will be announced
soon.

 

 

The University of Arkansas reserves the right to alter program

 

costs or content, or to cancel the program should extraordinary

 

circumstances require it.

 

For information on the study tour of 2001, consult the web
site: http://www.uark.edu/campus-resources/dlevine/Greece2001.html

 

 

 

 

Illustration: Orestes at Delphi. Apollo holds pig above
his head to purify Orestes from the murder of Clytemntestra. Next to Orestes
is the Omphalos, or navel stone of the world. To the right, Apollo’s sister
Artemis. To the left, the Ghost of Clytemnestra attempts to wake up the
sleeping Furies.