Summer in Rome with the University of Dallas 
                     
                     Pursuing Wisdom, Enjoying Beauty, Making Friends
                     
                     The University of Dallas Summer Rome Program invites thoughtful and eager undergraduate
                        students from other colleges and universities to study with us at our gorgeous campus
                        in the hills just outside of Rome and to travel to Florence, Venice, and Greece, our
                        alternative classrooms. Whether you join us for the first half, the second half, or
                        the whole summer, the great books and works of the Western tradition lead to an even
                        richer understanding of human potential for excellence when studied in the very places
                        that inspired them.
                     
                  
                  
                     
                     Course Descriptions
                     
                     History 2301: Western Civilization I , Dr. Matthew Berry
                     
                     The Western Civilization sequence offers the historical framework necessary to the
                        integration of the elements which make up a liberal education. Beginning with the
                        cultures of the ancient Near East, this course proceeds chronologically through the
                        Greco-Roman, medieval, Renaissance and Reformation periods, acquainting the student
                        with major political, social, and intellectual movements. Texts studied include Thucydides'
                        History of the Peloponnesian War, the first five books of Livy's Ab urbe condita, Boethius' Consolation of Philosophy, Thomas More's Utopia, and Russell Kirk's The Roots of American Order.
                     
                     Theology 2311: Western Theological Tradition, Dr. Adam Eitel
                     
                     Reflective reading of classic, post-biblical Christian texts with a view to tracing
                        the development of theological thought in Western Christianity from its beginnings
                        to the post-Vatican II era. 
                     
                     English 2311: Literary Tradition III, Dr. Sarah Berry
                     
                     The study of dramatic tragedies and comedies with a view to understanding the meaning
                        of these two alternative yet concurrently enduring vistas upon the human condition.
                        Readings in the Greek dramatists, the Elizabethans, and modern European and American
                        playwrights. Discussion of individual plays and continuity and difference within the
                        tradition, accompanied by the student's composition of interpretive essays. The Oresteia,
                        Oedipus the King, Oedipus at Colonus, Antigone, The Bacchae, Frogs, Hamlet, Othello,
                        Macbeth, King Lear, The Tempest, and a selection of modern dramas.
                     
                     Philosophy 2323: The Human Person, Dr. Kevin Kambo
                     
                     What does it mean to be human? Is there a soul and, if so, what is it? In light of
                        contemporary reductive materialism and its claims for the sufficiency of scientific
                        naturalism, this course explores the relationship between nature and soul. In the
                        classical philosophical understanding, the human person finds himself or herself in
                        tension between the immanent spheres of nature (or body or history) and the call to
                        a commitment to a transcendent dimension of reality--a transcendent dimension associated
                        with psyche, anima, mind, or spirit. The investigation includes an account of the
                        parts and powers of the soul, such as sense, desire, intellect, and will. Readings
                        feature texts by Plato, Aristotle, Augustine, Descartes, and Nietzsche.
                     
                     
                     
                     
                     
                     Dr. Andrew Moran, Chairman and Associate Professor of English, has been the director
                        of the University of Dallas' Summer Rome Semester since 2023. He first worked at the
                        Due Santi Rome Campus as the assistant director of "Shakespeare in Italy" in 2000,
                        which program he later directed. He also founded and directed Classical Education in Rome for graduate students and other adults, and has taught Literary Tradition III during
                        eleven fall and spring semesters. In addition to his scholarship on Shakespeare and
                        other authors, he is the co-editor of Due Santi and the University of Dallas: Un Piccolo Paradiso, and contributed a chapter on Maria Clementina Sobieska to People and Places of the Roman Past: The Educated Traveller's Guide, edited by Peter Hatlie (Arc Humanities Press, 2021).