All of my professors tend to go off on tangents in mid lecture about how there is no longer much value in a Classical education. Admittedly, it seems pretty true. I'll be studying Classics for the next four or five years in University, and once I'm finished, I have absolutely no idea what I'll be able to do with it. I don't know if there is a lucrative career out there waiting for someone with a degree in dead civilizations and languages, and I honestly don't even know where to start looking or if there's even a sizable group of people like me in the same boat (and if there isn't, it makes competition for that mystery job that much more thin).
Does anyone here a) study Classics, b) intend to study Classics, or c) make a living from studying Classics? Got any tips/advice/stories/anecdotes/narratives?
*For the uninitiated, Classics is the study of the languages, cultures, and civilizations of the Ancient World. Essentially, the Roman Empire/Republic, the Hellenistic era, Classical Greece, and all that fun stuff including Latin and Ancient Greek languages and dialects*
Does anyone here a) study Classics, b) intend to study Classics, or c) make a living from studying Classics? Got any tips/advice/stories/anecdotes/narratives?
*For the uninitiated, Classics is the study of the languages, cultures, and civilizations of the Ancient World. Essentially, the Roman Empire/Republic, the Hellenistic era, Classical Greece, and all that fun stuff including Latin and Ancient Greek languages and dialects*