Online Course: Health and Wellbeing in the Ancient World
Health and Wellbeing in the Ancient World
About the course
What did being healthy in ancient Rome or Greece
look like? How can we tell what wellbeing meant in ancient times? This
course will help you investigate the health of people in ancient Greece
and Rome, using both literary and archaeological evidence to uncover
details of real life in ancient societies.
Explore ancient life through primary evidence
This course is designed to challenge simplistic
approaches which apply modern distinctions to the ancient world. Instead
you’ll go back to the start and look at the primary evidence on which
all modern assumptions are based. You’ll examine different objects
closely, learning what each item can tell us about life in ancient
times.
Understand ancient theories by examining the body
On the course we’ll divide the body up into
organs and systems, using each as a starting point to explore ancient
theories of the structure and function of the human body, and other
aspects of ancient life.
We’ll discover ancient Greece and Rome in full,
from the public to the personal, and from army and urban life to the
lived experience of women and children. Using the evidence on the hair
and face, the eyes, the digestive system, the organs of reproduction and
the feet you’ll explore topics with which our society still wrestles,
including the location of the ‘self’; the relationship between mind and
body; identity; food and drink; sanitation; sexuality, ageing and
gender.
Improve your critical and analytical abilities
Through the course you’ll develop some of the skills needed in the study of classics and history including:
- Improving your ability to critically analyse primary sources
- Learning to analyse complex problems based on fragmentary evidence
- Developing your ability to engage with contemporary interpretations and scholarly debates.
For a taste of what will be covered in this course, read this post from Lead Educator, Helen King.
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