This dynamic series invites participants to explore masterpieces of world literature that illuminate timeless questions of politics, power, psychology, and human imagination. Together we'll read literary masterpieces with fresh eyes for our current moment. Through lively discussion, these courses connect ancient and modern voices across cultures, offering insight into enduring struggles of justice, freedom, and truth. No prior knowledge of any language but English is required. Additional details for each class are available at
Sophocles’ Oedipus Tyrannos (Rex in Latin) is a cold-case murder mystery in which the detective discovers that he himself committed the crime. The title itself begins a monstrous tangle of ironies since a Greek “tyrannos” is a non-hereditary usurper, but Oedipus turns out to be the son of the king he killed and replaced, engendering brothers and sisters as children in his own mother’s bed. As Sophocles plots the story, the play becomes a penetrating inquiry into human psychology (Freud’s Oedipus complex being a pale shadow), the inevitable tragedy of political life, and the limits of reason. All that aside, Oedipus is enormously fun to read, especially with others. No knowledge of Greek is required.