
Major & Minor information
You'll study the Greek and Latin languages in historical and cultural contexts like art, politics, and literature. You'll explore the achievements that have shaped intellectual history for over a millennia, as well as how people simply made their lives. For students with a keen interest in Greek and Latin.
Major credits: 36
Minor credits: 24
What can I do with a degree in Classical Languages?
What can I do with a degree in Classical Languages?
The Classical Languages major is adaptable - and valuable - leading to many different fields and fulfilling careers. Here are a few popular paths, but a Âé¶¹ÊÓÆµ degree can take you anywhere.
- Medicine
- Law
- Seminary
- Teaching
- Research
- Communications
$49,253 Average salary 5 years post graduation
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After Âé¶¹ÊÓÆµ
After Âé¶¹ÊÓÆµ
Gusties who major in Classical Languages are prepared for a variety of jobs and graduate programs at other top-tier organizations. Here's where some recent grads have landed and what they're doing:
- Marquette University
- UC Berkeley
- Hennepin Theatre Trust
- Americorp
- Latin Teacher
- Copywriter
- Attorney
- Research Specialist in Biomedical Sciences and Precision Medicine
- Technology Support Specialist

Course Examples
Interested in pursuing a Classical Languages Major/Minor? Here are some of the key courses offered within these programs.
GRE 211 Life & Death in Homer
In this course, students will deepen their understanding and appreciation of ancient Greek language and culture. Readings will consist of unadapted passages of the Iliad and/or the Odyssey. This course will cover a variety of topics such as Greek concepts of the hero, and representations of life, death, and interpersonal relationships in Homeric epics. Students will also explore art and archaeological remains that tell us more about the Homeric world, and the beliefs, values, lives, and fantasies that these earliest surviving poems reveal. This course counts toward the Comparative Literature minor.
LAT 301 Laughing Matters
Laughter erupts from many quarters of the Roman cultural landscape, from staged comic drama and jokes told at the expense of adversaries in political and legal speeches, through satire and witty poetry on all manner of subjects, to some of the world's first examples of the novel. In this course, students will expand and refine their knowledge and appreciation of the Latin language and Roman culture by reading selected passages of poetry and/or prose in the original as well as in English. This course counts toward the Comparative Literature minor.
LAT 302 Women, Power and Persecution
In this course students study the themes of social and political power and persecution as they relate to women. Roman texts on this many-sided subject typically involve learning about Roman gender roles across various categories of life, such as wealth status, inherited social rank, the public performance of emotion, among many others. Students consolidate their knowledge and appreciation of the Latin language and Roman culture by reading selected passages of prose and/or poetry in the original as well as in English. This course counts toward the Comparative Literature minor.
CLA 331 Ancient & Modern Identities
This course explores the various ways the Greeks and Romans speculated about and defined human difference. In this course we explore a variety of theories from antiquity that constitute what we today call race/ethnicity and how these ideas about identity manifested in ancient writings and images. The course includes readings from ancient poetry, drama, medical texts, geography, ethnography, philosophy, etc. We explore these ancient theories from Homer to Late Antiquity as well as how these theories were received in later times, with a special emphasis on the reception of ancient environmental theories of identity in the modern United States.

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