Introducing #Syllabi
Whenever
a topic related to Classics enters the mainstream media
discourse — like this summer’s discussion about what it meant that
several members of the Trump administration (both current and former)
profess to be fans of Thucydides — I brace myself. Too often, the
discourse in articles about the phenomenon is at a fairly low level.
Generalizations about what an author like Thucydides “means” abound (as though there were only one way to read Thucydides!).
And when classical scholars do decide to weigh in on social media and
blogs, their nuanced and thoughtful contributions get far less attention
than they deserve.
But we can change that. I’m thrilled to announce a new feature for Eidolon: virtual syllabi, collecting some of the best writing about Classics-related topics that are relevant to current events.
One
of the healthiest and most exciting trends in public academic
engagement of recent years is the collectively sourced virtual syllabus
of texts that can help make sense of confusing and disturbing events. Ferguson Syllabus, Trump Syllabus (versions one, two, and three), and the recent All Monuments Must Fall syllabus are just a few examples that come to my mind, but there are other excellent syllabi as well.
Many
of these syllabi, although not all, were crowdsourced. We’ve decided to
go in a slightly different direction for now by finding individual
scholars with expertise in the field to provide the first iteration of
the syllabus. But we hope that others will suggest more sources to add,
and we’ll update the syllabi as they do.
Additionally, because we’re Eidolon,
we’re going to make sure to incorporate sources in these syllabi that
go outside the normal range of scholarly articles and books. Do you know
of an excellent blog post, internet think piece, or Twitter thread on
the topic? Suggest it!
Tomorrow
we’ll publish our first syllabus, led by Neville Morley, who has
written a great deal about the online reception of Thucydides. Morley’s
syllabus will provide context to help readers understand this summer’s
somewhat surprising revelations about Thucydides in the White House.
If
you have suggestions to add to this syllabus, add them as comments on
the article itself. And if you have an idea for a different topic for a
syllabus, send it to us at pitches@eidolon.pub.
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