Be serious, /lit/.
Is the "Start with the Greeks" infographic just a meme or is it legit?
I'm starting up a history club and need a working lesson plan of literature.
>starting a history club
>doesn't even know if the Greeks were important or not in the history of literature
>>9630660
We're all running blind in this so figured using a premade lesson plan like the Start With The Greeks thing might be a start for us.
>>9630647
Can I join your history club? :3
>>9630664
Starting with the Greeks is not a meme, but the infographic is.
/lit/ is just about posting old stale memes. Don't take anything here seriously.
>>9630680
http://imgur.com/a/GvQ4o
>>9630647
it's a meme, skip everything that came before nietzsche and you will be fine
>>9630664
well, it's not just a meme. Go:
Homer (Iliad, Odyssey)
Hesiod (Works and Days might be especially be interesting to you - it describes much of rural life in his day)
Herodotus (especially interesting since it's a history book, but a lot is just BS stories he got told and included. It's great fun to read)
Thucydides (another history one, but more serious business than Herodotus)
The Tragedian playwrights
Plato
Aristotle
You can also read Xenophon too since he was a historian, but isn't included in that chart (I think)
>>9630687
is this infographic good?
>>9630695
seconded
>>9630668
it is right-leaning