The Medieval Quest as a Model for Us Today

Albrecht Classen
MONDAYS 9:00 a.m. until 12:00 p.m.
September 30 until December 16, 2013
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The Medieval Quest as a Model for Us Today

Fall 2013
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MONDAYS
9:00 a.m. until 12:00 p.m.
September 30 until December 16, 2013

Location: 

Main Campus

Tuition: 

$195.00

This course will focus on some of the central and most significant texts from the Middle Ages which have withstood the test of time and continue to exert a tremendous fascination on us today. We will explore what some of the fundamental issues in human life have always been and how responses to them in the past prove to be most illuminating for us today. Some of those issues are: meaning of fortune/misfortune, happiness in human life, experience of death, loss of love, love itself, heroism and tragedy, friendship, gift giving, exploration of the unknown, religious conflicts and difference, the quest for God, and the meaning of life as such.
 
As diverse as those issues all seem to be, ultimately they all circle around the one and the same critical point, human life. Medieval literature offers a treasurehouse of most insightful examples of how to approach this huge question from many different perspectives.
 

Required Reading: 

Classen, Albrecht, ed. Medieval Answers to Modern Problems. 2nd rev. edition. Cognella, 2013. ISBN: 978-1-62131-979-5.

 

This book is available for purchase in digital format through the University Readers' student e-commerce store (https://students.universityreaders.com/store/). A few copies will be available at the UA bookstore at the General Books Counter on the main floor.

 

Meet Your Professor

University Distinguished Professor
Department of German Studies

ALBRECHT CLASSEN is University Distinguished Professor of German Studies; He has published 122 scholarly books, ca. 840 articles, 2400 book reviews, ten volumes of poetry, and four volumes of essays. He is the editor of several journals and has received numerous awards for teaching (including the HSP Superior Teaching Award), research, and service. In the Fall of 2022, he spent a semester in Cairo, Egypt, as a Fulbright grantee.

  • Ted and Shirley Taubeneck Superior Teaching Award

Location

Poetry Center
Dorothy Rubel Room
1508 E Helen
Tucson, AZ 85721
United States
Located on the SE corner of Helen Street and Vine Avenue, one block north of Speedway and three blocks west of Campbell Ave.

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