Available courses

  • Teacher: Rebeccah Lijek
  • Teacher: Martha Hoopes
  • Teacher: Martha Hoopes
  • Teacher: Jason Andras
  • Teacher: Sarah Bacon
  • Teacher: Gary Gillis
  • Teacher: Jason Andras
  • Teacher: Craig Woodard
  • Teacher: Maria Gomez
  • Teacher: Kate Lepore
  • Teacher: Rowan Scott
  • Teacher: Caroline Steenhoek
  • Teacher: Kyle Broaders
  • Teacher: Kate Lepore
  • Teacher: Kate Lepore
  • Teacher: Alan Van Giessen
  • Teacher: Himali Jayathilake
  • Teacher: Kate Lepore
  • Teacher: Alan Van Giessen
  • Teacher: Wei Chen
  • Teacher: Donald Cotter
  • Teacher: Himali Jayathilake
  • Teacher: Rowan Scott
  • Teacher: Caroline Steenhoek
  • Teacher: Gary Snyder
  • Teacher: Rowan Scott
  • Teacher: Gary Snyder
  • Teacher: Gary Snyder
  • Teacher: Rowan Scott
  • Teacher: Gary Snyder
  • Teacher: Gary Snyder
  • Teacher: Gary Snyder
  • Teacher: Wei Chen
  • Teacher: Kyle Broaders
  • Teacher: Maria Gomez
  • Teacher: Bruce Arnold
The Greeks, beginning with Homer, saw the world from an essentially tragic perspective. The searing question of why human societies and the human psyche repeatedly break down in tragic ruin and loss, particularly in the conflicts of war and in the betrayal of personal bonds of love and friendship, …