PhD Reading List for Philologists (for students entering in 2024 and later)
The following list of authors and works is intended as a guide for preparation for the comprehensive exams in Greek and Latin literature. Students may make substitutions to accommodate their own interests and previous reading, but the list provides an indication of the range of literature that all philologists should have worked through before taking the comprehensive exams. All substitutions must be approved in advance by the selected examiners.
The purpose of the comprehensive exams in Greek and Latin literature is to determine whether you control sufficient detail and breadth to be granted, upon satisfactory completion of a dissertation, a PhD in Philology. You will be asked to demonstrate knowledge such as other persons holding the PhD in Philology typically have, and you will be asked to synthesize and explain important literary and cultural concepts. For more information, you should consult the graduate advisor in Philology and Ancient History.
You will do some of the readings in the context of courses, but you are expected to complete the remainder of the readings independently starting from the very beginning of your graduate career. The summers provide crucial blocks of time when you are expected to be working through the reading list either on your own or by forming a reading group.
Your preparation for the comprehensive exams should also include reading general handbooks on Greek and Latin literature, such as the Cambridge History of Classical Literature (2 vols.) and G.B. Conte, Latin Literature (1994). You should also acquaint yourself with secondary literature for each of the authors and works you read in consultation with faculty and your examiners. Throughout your readings, you should practice explicating these texts within their historical/cultural contexts and comparing them to other works written in the same or related literary genres.
It is expected that the readings will be prepared from the standard OCT or Teubner texts as available and that you use suitable commentaries as needed. Please consult with your professors if you have questions about selecting an edition or commentary.
I. Greek Readings in the original.
A. Archaic Period
Homer: Iliad 1, 3, 6, 9, 16–24; Odyssey 1, 5–12, 21–23; Hymns, one of the following: 2–5
Hesiod: Works and Days 1–382; Theogony 1–885
Lyric poetry: Selections in Campbell
Presocratics: Selections in Kirk, Raven, Schofield for Anaximander, Heraclitus, Parmenides, Empedocles
Aeschylus: Oresteia
Pindar: Ol. 1, 2; Pyth. 1, 2, 4
B. Classical Period
Gorgias: Helen
Antiphon: First Tetralogy
Sophocles: Ajax, Oedipus Tyrannus, Antigone
Euripides: Medea, Helen, Bacchae
Herodotus: Books 1 and 7
Aristophanes: Acharnians, Clouds, Frogs
Thucydides: 1.1–23, 2.35–46, and book 7
Plato: Apology; Republic 7 and 10; Phaedrus
Hippocratic corpus: Airs, Waters, and Places
Lysias: 1 and 12
Isocrates: Helen
Xenophon: Memorabilia 1 and 2.1
Demosthenes: On the Crown; Olynthiac 1
Aristotle: Poetics; Nicomachean Ethics 1 or Politics 1
Menander: Dyscolus
C. Hellenistic and Imperial Period Theocritus: 1–7, 15, 22
Apollonius: Argonautica 3
Callimachus: Aetia Fr. 1; Hymns 5
Epigram: Selections in Hopkinson
Plutarch: Life of Pericles; How to Study Poetry
Lucian: True History
Longus: Daphnis and Chloe 1 and 2
II. Additional Greek works to be read either in translation or in the original
Homer: all. Homeric Hymns: all. Hesiod: Works and Days, Theogony (entire). Aeschylus: all. Sophocles: all. Herodotus: all. Euripides: all. Thucydides: all. Aristophanes: all. Plato: Republic (entire); Xenophon: Memorabilia (entire); Longus: Daphnis and Chloe (entire)
III. Latin Readings
A. Early Latin
Livius Andronicus and Naevius: Maltby and Slater
Ennius: Annales and Tragedies Goldberg and Manuwald
Plautus: Amphitruo and Pseudolus
Terence: Hecyra and Eunuchus
Early Latin Prose: Courtney
B. Republican Latin
Lucretius: De rerum natura 1 and 3
Catullus: Carmina omnia
Caesar: Bellum civile 1 and Bellum Gallicum 1
Cicero: Speeches: In Catilinam 1; pro Caelio; Philippic 2. Letters: Selection of D. R. Shackleton Bailey. Rhetorica: De Oratore 1, Brutus, Orator. Philosophica: Somnium Scipionis; De natura deorum 1; De officiis 1.
Sallust: Catiline or Jugurtha
Vergil: Bucolics; Georgics 1 and 4; Aeneid 1, 2, 4, 6, 8, 12
Horace: Sermones 1.1, 1.4, 1.9, 1.10, 2.1; Carmina; Epistulae 1; Ars poetica
Livy: Ab urbe condita 1 and 21
Propertius: Monobiblos
Ovid: Amores 1; Metamorphoses 1, 8, 15; Heroides 7; Ars Amatoria 1, Fasti 1, Tristia 2
Sulpicia
Tibullus: Book 1
C. Imperial Latin
Augustus: Res gestae
Lucan: Pharsalia 1
Petronius: 26–78 (Cena Trimalchionis); and 85–87, 111–112 (Milesian tales)
Seneca: Thyestes; Letters, Selection in Summers or Edwards; Apocolocyntosis
Quintilian: Institutio 10.1
Martial: Epigrams, Selection in Watson
Pliny, Younger: Letters, Selection in Sherwin–White, Fifty Letters of Pliny
Statius: Thebaid 1 and 12
Suetonius: Life of Augustus
Tacitus: Annales 1, 4, 6; Historiae 1; Dialogus
Juvenal: Satirae 1, 3, 4, 7, 10
Apuleius: Metamorphoses 1.1–20 and 4.28–6.24 (Cupid and Psyche)
IV. Additional Latin works to be read either in translation or in the original
Lucretius: entire. Cicero: De oratore entire; Republic entire; De natura deorum entire; De officiis entire. Sallust: Historiae. Livy: 1–5 entire. Ovid: Metamorphoses entire; Fasti entire; Vergil: all; Propertius: all. Lucan: all. Petronius: all. Tacitus: all. Apuleius: Metamorphoses entire.