School officials cite the purported need to combat racism. The university announced the decision in its May 2021 issue of Princeton Alumni Weekly.
According to Princeton's website, the Classics department "investigates the history, language, literature, and thought of ancient Greece and Rome. We use the perspectives of multiple disciplines to understand and imagine the diversity of these civilizations over almost two thousand years and to reflect on what the classical past has meant to later ages, and to our own."
Classics, which
previously required an intermediate proficiency in
Greek or Latin to enter the concentration, has now
eliminated that prerequisite as well as the
requirement to continue taking classes in Greek
and Latin languages.
Classics majors at Princeton—yes, classics majors—will no longer be required
— Aaron Sibarium (@aaronsibarium) May 29, 2021
to learn Greek or Latin, because racism. pic.twitter.com/84ea1khx2v
The university states that students are still
encouraged to take either of the languages, but
director of undergraduate studies and professor of
classics Josh Billings said that the "breadth of
offerings remains the same."
Changes to the Classics requirements reportedly predate a call from the University's president Christoper Eisgruber to combat systematic racism at Princeton, but Billings said that a new urgency was sparked after the widespread protests on racism last summer.
"We think that
having new perspectives in the field will make the
field better," said Billings. "Having people who
come in who might not have studied classics in
high school and might not have had a previous
exposure to Greek and Latin, we think that having
those students in the department will make it a
more vibrant intellectual community." (read
more)