James Stewart
Thu, 05 Oct 2006 10:52:09 -0700
Jim Stewart Department of Latin Sturgis Charter Public School Hyannis, MA 02601
From: "David Wilson-Okamura" <david@virgil.org> Reply-To: mantovano@virgil.org To: mantovano@virgil.org Subject: VIRGIL: cheap Latin Virgil: is there anything in print? Date: Thu, 5 Oct 2006 09:38:36 -0400 As I explained several weeks ago, a couple of us at my university are teaching a course on Virgil in translation next semester and thought it might work to assign a facing-page translation, i.e., the Loeb. Trouble is, even the revised Loeb is still too stiff sounding. I've abandoned the Loeb idea, but I'd still like for students to have the Latin text ready at hand, both while they're reading and while we'rediscussing it in class. This will give our classicists a chance to use theirLatin for literary analysis and perhaps entice some our non-classicists to start learning the language. One solution would be to require everyone in the class to buy the OCT, inaddition to whichever translations we assign. But for the non-classicists inthe bunch, that is going to seem unreasonable: why should I be required to purchase a $35 book that's written in a language I can't read?My question then: does anyone know of another Latin text of Virgil that's inprint and cheaper than the OCT? ----------------------------------------------------------------------- Dr. David Wilson-Okamura http://virgil.org david@virgil.org English Department Virgil reception, discussion, documents, &c East Carolina University Sparsa et neglecta coegi. -- Claude Fauchet -----------------------------------------------------------------------
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