Classics

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Maet

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Jul 31, 2008
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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*
 

Phantom2595

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Sep 28, 2008
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Historian?

Really , I want to be and editor or whatever for a newspaper , but recently I've been thinking how awesome it would be to have real life AI like in Sci-Fi(Cortanna from Halo to give you guys an idea.)
 

Cousin_IT

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Feb 6, 2008
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Im doing history, & the only thing that really seems to prepare me for is a career teaching other people history. I think most of the humanities are the same in that regard. Yippee :-D

[of course theres the whole 'transferable skills' stuff. But what interesting jobs do the skills of reading books & writing long essays transfer to? Accounting? :-D]
 

Graustein

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Cousin_IT said:
Im doing history, & the only thing that really seems to prepare me for is a career teaching other people history. I think most of the humanities are the same in that regard. Yippee :-D
Sounds like a plan =D
I intend to make a living off teaching and writing history books. That or psychiatry.
 

Maet

The Altoid Duke
Jul 31, 2008
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harhol said:
I thought the only reason people study Classics is to get into Oxford or Cambridge...
That was actually my plan about a year and a half ago. Then I remembered that I'm not extravagantly wealthy and I live half the world away.
 

TwistedEllipses

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Nov 18, 2008
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Cousin_IT said:
Im doing history, & the only thing that really seems to prepare me for is a career teaching other people history. I think most of the humanities are the same in that regard. Yippee :-D

[of course theres the whole 'transferable skills' stuff. But what interesting jobs do the skills of reading books & writing long essays transfer to? Accounting? :-D]
yep, doing History as well. I'm essentially spending a lot of money to stall a couple of years till I can come up with a career plan...

Classics is only particularly useful if you won't to become a criminal mastermind...preferably one who's a cannibal and has an perplexing relationship with an female FBI agent...
 

chimmers

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Nov 18, 2007
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carnkhan4 said:
Classics is only particularly useful if you won't to become a criminal mastermind..
My girlfriend is studying classics, and was last year voted most likely to take over the world. I get it now...

(left out the cannibalism and lesbian affair bit, cos that's less good)
 

Lukeje

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Feb 6, 2008
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Maet said:
harhol said:
I thought the only reason people study Classics is to get into Oxford or Cambridge...
That was actually my plan about a year and a half ago. Then I remembered that I'm not extravagantly wealthy and I live half the world away.
Why should that stop you?

As a profession...Classics Professor? Or a career in the civil service...
 

Ken Korda

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Nov 21, 2008
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Phantom2595 said:
Really , I want to be and editor or whatever for a newspaper , but recently I've been thinking how awesome it would be to have real life AI like in Sci-Fi(Cortanna from Halo to give you guys an idea.)
WTF does that have do to with anything?
 

ChocoCake

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Nov 23, 2008
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My one buddy is taking history, I think something along the lines of The Western World. He says it is extremely interesting, and that our highschool teachers turned many people off of a wonderful subject. Well, that is mostly because that particular teacher was a complete science addict. Anyway, he said he was taking a few mediterranean courses as well, but has yet to experience them.
 

Lord George

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Aug 25, 2008
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History and classic degrees are meant to be quite good to get as many employers see it as a sign that you can commit and concentrate hard well according to one of my teachers still it's an English degree for me because I'm a lazy ass
 

ianuam

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Aug 28, 2008
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I'll be studying Classics at the University of Nottingham starting in 09. On a gap year at the moment. From what i hear, if you're really interested the financial sector loves people with Classics degrees, as does the legal profession. Personally i'm stopping in Academia after i finish, i plan on either going into Romano-British Archaeology and writing.
 

AwesomeHat

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Jan 17, 2008
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You could always consider something along the lines of museum curator, although perhaps a degree in history would be more appropriate.
 

cleverlymadeup

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Mar 7, 2008
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historian or teacher

we do need ppl to learn some of the old tricks tho, there's a lot of old stuff that we are currently forgetting due to modern technology and yet is very useful in this day and age
 

Blank Verse

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Nov 17, 2008
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A/B) I'm an English/Classics double-major, though I've been thinking of dropping English for comparative literature while there's still time. I don't know yet. I'm also interested in Old English and Old Norse, so anything above undergraduate study is still undecided.

C) A few of my professors have suggested working for museums, teaching (my original plan), studying law, archaeology (sounds like fun), being a lobbyist of sorts, journalism and reviews, and, odd as it may sound, advising culture creation in video games.

Though I plan on teaching at a college level, every boarding school and a few public schools need Latin and Ancient Greek teachers. I've been pondering on that for a while since some boarding schools can pay close to a university salary.

Also, according to my biology professor, Latin and Ancient Greek teachers are somewhat needed in Appalachian areas. He spent his youth there and he's fairly young, so I imagine his knowledge isn't terribly out-dated.

Richer areas would have a greater need for Classics teachers/professors, I'd think.

Maet said:
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).
Though I can't speak for all of America, Classics majors are a rare breed in southwest Virginia-- Hell, they're rare in Viginia. Two things are preached here: engineering and technology. Anything else is secondary--

--which actually encourages me.
 

Eyclonus

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Apr 12, 2008
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There seem to be only a few career paths that studying the classics leads to:
1) Being a History Lecturer
2) Being a high school History teacher
3) Being an Historian on a BBC documentary series and making pots of money by making history sound sexy to the unwashed masses...
 

Blank Verse

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Nov 17, 2008
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Eyclonus said:
There seem to be only a few career paths that studying the classics leads to:
1) Being a History Lecturer
2) Being a high school History teacher
3) Being an Historian on a BBC documentary series and making pots of money by making history sound sexy to the unwashed masses...
Depending on what Classics program we follow, we can also study philosophy, language and literature. Several professors at public colleges make a living teaching classes on one of those three, let alone history.

Not that I'm suggesting you don't know that, Eyclonus. I only wanted to clarify this bit for other readers:


Maet said:
*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*
.
 

Eyclonus

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Apr 12, 2008
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Blank Verse said:
Depending on what Classics program we follow, we can also study philosophy, language and literature. Several professors at public colleges make a living teaching classes on one of those three, let alone history.
I was merely referring to the fact that anything related to History, especially that far back, is really given the backseat when non-Academics compare it to other fields like Micro-Biology and pretty much anything from the Business faculties, in terms of percieved value and utility. Which is a shame because a lot of life's lessons are best learnt studying History.