Wednesday, December 16, 2009

Mundus Sophiae

Die Veneris praeteritae hebdomadis ultimam probationem sessionalem administravi. Erant etiam libelli, tractatuli, pensa hercule permulta quae deberem emendare, quibus notae assignandae essent. Dies Saturni, Solis, Lunae longos mihi et molestos serviliter laboravi sed -- gratias Deo -- non multo ante illam "lineam mortis" notas discipulis reddidi. Iam feriae incipiunt. Primum opus mihi erat inspicere pelliculam quandem alumnis meis destinatam quae Mundus Sophiae nominata in mythistoria scriptoris norvegiensis Jostein Gaarder fundata mihi commendata erat ut fabella et grata et plena utilitatis scholasticae. Quae sine dubio accuratissime descripta fuit. Historia Sophiae, adulescentulae quaerentis ut cognoscat quis et cuias ipsa sit, spectatores animosos capiet atque permulcebit. Quod et Socrates et Plato, attice loquentes, partes suas in pellicula agunt, mihi quidem est delectationi gratiosissimae. Tota opera apta decora iucundissima. Necesse autem est subtitulos hispanice legere nisi linguam norvegiensem scis....Haec digna pellicula oculos Americanos ad se adhuc (ut videtur) non convertit.

Tuesday, December 8, 2009

Qua de causa Americani pelliculas tolerabiles de Graecia non faciunt?

Sunt sine dubio non paucae pelliculae a Graecis vicesimi saeculi atque vicesimi primi quae mihi maxime placent: Stella, exempli gratia, atque Pote ten Kuriake (in his quid non est diligendum?); historicae ut Nymphae; recentior illa periucunda imaginaribusque viribus impleta Politike Kouzina. Sunt autem pelliculae quae maxime displicent, et hae ab Americanis de Graecis pactae: inter pessimas nunc (praeterita nocte visam) possum numerare hanc nomine Mea Vita in Ruinis. Certe primagonistria Nia Vardalos, zaftig atque amabilis, corda nostra attrahit; argumentum autem incredibile stomachum movet, personae animum repellunt, conceptum totum ruinosissimum est.

Wednesday, December 2, 2009

Consilia ad aestimationes librorum conscribendas

Ecce index consiliorum regularumque quae ad aestimationes conscribendas pertinent. In situ nostro "Humanistica" constituimus praebere occasionem discipulis componendi aestimationes librorum qui classicistas atque humanistas attrahant.

Guidelines for Humanistica et Classica Book Reviews

Thanks for your interest in writing a book review for Humanistica et Classica Book Reviews. This site is devoted to book reviews on subjects of interest to humanists and classicists. Our reviews are intended for both the general and the scholarly reader. Our review authors are all undergraduates interested in Classical languages and Classical studies.

Those interested in reviewing a book should contact the head blogger, Diane Johnson, at diane.johnson@wwu.edu. State the title and author of the book you are interested in reviewing, and explain why you feel this book deserves attention on our site. If Diane agrees with you, you will be sent a copy of the book (yours to keep); when your review is submitted, you will be presented with a home-baked pie or cake (specify your preference), and your review will be vetted by the Classics Section of the Modern and Classical Languages Department at Western Washington University. Then the review will be put on the Humanistica site. We welcome participation by students at other undergraduate institutions: please be aware however that it may be impossible to mail you a pie or a cake, and so cookies or fudge may have to be substituted.

Here are some points that you will want to keep in mind:
1. Your review should take into consideration each of the following:
a. What is the book about? Give a synopsis of the author's argument Is there an index? an appendix? illustrations?

b. Does it seem to you that the author has argued convincingly?
Why or why not?

c. Who would benefit from this book, and why?
d. Are there other studies on this topic with which you are familiar?
2. Length: 1000-1500 words (4-6 pages double-spaced).
3. Please double-space your text.
4. Your review doesn't need a title. Instead, begin by stating the title of the book under review, using this format:
The School of Libanius in Late Antique Antioch. By Raffaella Cribiore. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2007. ISBN 978-0-691-12824-5. Pp 360. $69.95 (hardcover).

5. At the end of your review, skip a line and then provide your name and email address (if you are willing to be contacted by email; if you would prefer to have all discussion of the review limited to the blogsite, do not include your email address).
6. Please submit your review to Diane by email attachment.

6. It is absolutely essential that your words be your own; please be sure that when you are quoting other people's work you acknowledge them in your review. Document your quotations of the reviewed text by providing a page number in parentheses; other quoted material should be cited fully in parentheses.