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Table of Contents

Academic Life
A St. Olaf Education
The 4-1-4 Calendar
Academic Resources
Majors and More
Graduation Requirements
Campus Facilities

Academic Regulations
Entering St. Olaf
Transferring to St. Olaf/Transferring Courses
Registering for Courses
Special Registrations
Successful Study
Counting Courses and Credits
Academic Status
Curricular Regulations and Advice
Records/Policies
Leaving St. Olaf

The Academic Programs
How to Use This Catalog
Africa and the Americas
American Conversations
American Racial and Multicultural Studies
American Studies
Ancient Studies
Art and Art History
Asian Conversations
Asian Studies
Biology
Biomedical Studies
Chemistry
Chinese
Classics
Communication and Theater
Computer Science
Dance
Economics
Education
English
Environmental Studies
Family and Social Service
Family Studies
Fine Arts
Foreign Languages Across the Curriculum (FLAC)
French
German
Great Conversation
Hispanic Studies
Historical Perspectives
History
Integrative Studies, Center for
Interdisciplinary Fine Arts
Interdisciplinary Studies
Japanese
Linguistic Studies
Management Studies
Mathematics
Media Studies
Medieval Studies
Middle East Studies
Molecular Biology
Music
Neuroscience
Nordic Studies
Norwegian
Nursing
Philosophy
Physical Education
Physics
Political Science
Psychology
Religion
Romance Languages
Russian
Russian and Central European Studies
Social Studies Education
Social Work
Sociology/Anthropology
Spanish
Theatre
Statistics
Women's Studies

International and Off-Campus Studies
Overview
Programs Led by St. Olaf Faculty
Study/Service Programs
Student Teaching Abroad
Interim Courses
Semester and Year-Long Programs

Special Programs
Education Put to Work
Pre-Professional Preparation

Admissions and Financial Aid
Admissions Procedures
Financing Your Education
Financial Aid Program

Life Outside the Classroom
Residential Life
Student Services
Co-Curricular Activities

People
Board of Regents
Emeritus Faculty and Staff Members
Faculty, 2000-01
Administrators, 2000-01

Facts and Figures
History and Heritage
Recent Statistics

College Calendar
2000-2001 College Calendar
2001-2002 College Calendar
2002-2003 College Calendar

The Great Conversation

http://www.stolaf.edu/depts/great-conversation/

Director, 2000-01: Edmund N. Santurri, Religion and Philosophy

Faculty, 2000-01: W. Bruce Benson, Religion; Sylvia G. Carullo, Spanish; Rick Fairbanks, Philosophy; James May, Classics; J. Eric Nelson, English; Corliss Swain, Philosophy; Solveig Zempel, Norwegian

An integrated sequence of five courses taken over two years, the Great Conversation introduces students to the major epochs of Western tradition through direct encounter with significant works. Beginning with the ancient Greeks and Hebrews, the program traces the development of literary and artistic expression, philosophic thought, religious belief, and historical reflections on western culture into the modern world. Students respond to great works, challenging the ideas expressed in them and challenging their own ideas as well, thus joining the conversation of men and women through the ages about the perennial issues of human life.

The Great Conversation is open to students of all interests. This program appeals to those who like to read, discuss, and write about ideas; those who believe that learning about the past is profoundly relevant to understanding the present; those who want to examine the Western tradition in a unified way, and those who believe that an education ought to cultivate discriminating minds, inquisitive spirits, and moral sensitivity.

The three faculty members who teach the Great Conversation remain with the students through all five courses in the standard sequence (113-218), as fellow participants in the conversation. Besides living in the same residence hall during their first year, students in the Great Conversation enjoy eating meals together, attending films and theater, and going on field trips.

ADMISSION TO THE PROGRAM

Each year the faculty of the Great Conversation choose at least 66 first-year students to participate in the program. Selection is based on an essay describing the reasons for the student's interest in the program. Great Conversation brochures and application forms are sent to students after they are admitted to St.ŻOlaf.

GENERAL EDUCATION

By successfully completing courses 113-218 of The Great Conversation, a student fulfills the following General Education requirements:
Biblical and Theological Study (one course)
First-year Writing (one course)
Historical Studies in Western Culture (two courses)
Artistic Studies (one course)
Literary Studies (one course)
Courses with Writing (three courses)
Oral Communication (one 0.25 course)

COURSES

Great Conversation 113-218 are offered only to first-year students and sophomores enrolled in the Great Conversation. Great Conversation students must take these courses in sequence.

113 The Tradition Beginning: The Greeks and the Hebrews

Students contrast the world views of the ancient Greeks and Hebrews: Greek polytheism and the hero with the Hebrew notion of one God and the believer; Greek notions of civic community and earthly life with the Hebrew ideal of a religious covenant and historical destiny; Greek thoughts about beauty, war, peace, justice, politics, metaphysics, art, architecture, and drama with the prophetic stance toward the past and the future. Students read and discuss works by Homer, Sappho, Thucydides, Sophocles, Plato, Aristotle, the writers of the Old Testament, and the artistry of the Parthenon.

115 The Tradition Continuing: The Romans and the Christians

Students explore the Greek and Hebrew legacies in Roman society and in the New Testament, discussing various attempts to find personal fulfillment in political life, in stoicism and epicureanism, and in the teachings of Christ and St. Paul. Students read works by Cicero, Horace, Virgil, Epictetus, the writers of the New Testament, and study the artistry of Roman sculpture. Offered only in Interim. GE: BTS-B, WRI.

116 The Tradition Redefined: The Medieval Synthesis

This course pursues the expansion of Christianity throughout the Roman world and the synthesis of the Judeo-Christian and the Greco-Roman in the early Middle Ages. Students consider the development of a unified world view as expressed in religious devotions, philosophy, literature, and art, and in monasticism and feudalism in Church and Empire. Students discuss works by Augustine, Benedict, Hildegard of Bingen, Aquinas, Dante, Chaucer, and Christine de Pisan, medieval drama, and the artistry of Chartres Cathedral. GE: FYW, HWC.

217 The Tradition Renewed: New Forces of Secularization

Students examine the Renaissance's return to classical values and the Reformation's return to early Christian attitudes which challenge the authority of the medieval synthesis. Students trace the development of new sources of authority including the new science with its influence on art, literature, politics, and philosophy. Discussions consider Luther, Calvin, Descartes, Locke, Milton, Aphra Behn, Voltaire, Rousseau, Goethe, Teresa of Avila, Wollstonecraft, and the artistry of Michaelangelo, Caravaggio, Bach, and Shakespeare. GE: ALS-L.

218 The Tradition in Crisis: Dissenters and Defenders

Revolutionary changes occurred in economics, politics, philosophy, aesthetics, and women's roles at the beginning of the 19th century. Students consider the development of modern social and natural sciences, and examine various attempts to restate the Western tradition in the face of continuing intellectual and social transformations. Students discuss Darwin, Marx, Freud, Nietzsche, Dostoyevsky, Woolf, and King, and the artistry of Beethoven, Ibsen, David, and Picasso. GE: ALS-A, HWC, ORC.

250 Theology and the Visual Arts: The Great Conversation in Italy (abroad)

Study of Christian theology and visual art in central and northern Italy (Rome, Florence, Milan and environs), ranging from ancient to modern times. Theological exploration of the significance of visual art and consideration of selected art works, in museums and on site, as expressions of theological meaning. Readings from traditional and contemporary Christian theology and art-historical interpretation. Subject treated in the broader sweep of intellectual history covered in The Great Conversation program. Prerequisites: Completion of Great Conversation 217 or permission of instructor. GE: BTS-T. (January 2001).

310 Ethical Issues and Normative Perspectives: The Great Conversation Continued

This course examines ethical issues from perspectives that are contemporary expressions of or reactions to classic normative traditions covered in the two-year sequence of the Great Conversation program. Included among these perspectives will be one or more contemporary representatives of the Christian theological tradition. Among the possible ethical issues considered are political morality, sexuality, gender, matters of life and death (war, euthanasia, abortion), economic justice, and environmental responsibility. Prerequisite: completion of Great Conversation 218 or permission of instructor required. GE: EIN.