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Achilles' Shield celebrates the extraordinary vigor of life on this earth. It is also Homer's hopeful vision of a world moving toward peace as its citizens work in concert with nature and each other. Thus Achilles' Shield is a fitting icon for a course that asks, "What does it mean to be a human being living in society?" |
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The movie as political discourse Web page explores how a particular movie (from the movies on the right and left) deals with the same questions the course asks during the semester. You will look at how your movie defines justice, and how it shows justice achieved—or not achieved—within the community. You will examine what your movie teaches us about political systems. You might want to suggest what English 2000 writer your movie most resembles. Additionally, the following questions that were dramatized in Greek tragedy and comedy can help you generate insightful analyses of your movie, explaining to the reader/viewer how movies perform a political function in our society. Background
Through the working out of these questions in both tragic and comic formats, Greek drama helped shape public life and assisted in the formation of the citizens, teaching them how to discuss and take part in public life. In English 2000: Citizens in Time, we suggest that serious movies can perform the same function for our culture that Greek drama did: they open up and explore questions crucial to the citizens and their community.
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Created by Dorothy McCaughey 09/28/2010 Louisiana State University
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