Philip Purchase teaches courses in Greek and Latin, as well as courses for the department of Comparative Literature & Thought.
Teaching in Text and Traditions defines and nourishes my intellectual life at Washington University.
It is a delight regularly to revisit works such as the Iliad, the lyrics of Sappho, Shakespeare’s Sonnets, and Madame Bovary; to do so in the company of others is a privilege. I approach the literature survey courses as evolving meditations on the uses of tradition. Similarly, my Pastoral Literature class engages the rich transformative history of the singing shepherd, a figure whose course we trace from ancient Greece to contemporary America.
I also take great pleasure in teaching Greek and Latin at all levels, from introductory grammar to literary and rhetorical analysis.
In my research, I trace currents of inheritance and transformation in various literary fields. I am currently considering the representation of the city in the poetry of Theocritus and Cavafy, and I am pursuing the interplay of psychoanalytic thought and artistic practice in the writings of Marion Milner, D. W. Winnicott, and Joyce Cary.