Terence Tunberg (born 1950) is a professor of Latin at the University of Kentucky, specialising in Neo-Latin studies, especially the use of Ciceronian language; and the use of spoken Latin as a teaching tool. He is also Director of the university's Institute for Latin Studies.[1] His academic output is in both Latin and English.
They described translations of The Grinch as difficult, given the informality of the language, but attempted something that was playful but not so idiomatic as to be hard to read.[2]
Use of spoken Latin in pedagogy
He is a "proponent of Latin speaking as a means of helping with language learning and, for more advanced students, as a way to consolidate knowledge of the language."[4] He founded and convenes the annual Lexington Latin Conventiculum, the first of its kind in the USA.[4][5]
Together with Milena Minkova, Tunberg founded an MA programme in Latin that uses the language as the medium of instruction in the University of Kentucky in 2000. Students from these programmes have gone on to found their own Living Latin events around the US, helping to build the practice.[6] While he is "convinced that using Latin for communication and active discourse with students enhances the quality of both learning and teaching", he also believes that Latin should be taught differently from living languages, not least as reading is an early goal, and does not practice 'full immersion', i.e. teaching Latin through Latin at an early stage.[7]
He was elected a fellow of the Academia Latinitati Fovendae in 1998, an institution that promotes the use of spoken Latin.[8] His own spoken Latin is of a very high standard, sometimes better than his English,[9] and he is able to "discuss absolutely any subject in Latin with clarity and eloquence".[10]
Select bibliography
1986: "What is Boncompagno's 'Newest Rhetoric'?", Traditio
1987: "Conrad of Hirsau and his Approach to the Auctores", Medievalia et Humanistica 15
1987: Oculus Pastoralis (dissertation)
1987: "Conrad of Hirsau and his approach to the Auctores" in The Early Renaissance (editore P.M. Clogan)
1988: "The Latinity of Lorenzo Valla's Gesta Ferdinandi regis Aragonum", in Humanistica Lovaniensia, vol. 37, pp. 30–78.
1989: "De orbe terrarum ab hominibus inquinato", in Latinitas, Dec., 1989, pp. 299–308.
1990: Oculus Pastoralis (versio publica)
1992: "A study of clausulae in selected works by Lorenzo Valla", in Humanistica Lovaniensia, vol. 41, pp. 104–133.
1996: (cum Tournoy) "On the Margins of Latinity? Neo-Latin and the Vernacular Languages," Humanistica Lovaniensia 45, pp. 134–175
1999: "Catalogus operum recens editorum quae ad sermonis Neolatini proprietates spectant" (pars altera), in Retiario, n° 2.2
1999: "Iam cogitandum est de Latinitate proximo millenio colenda" (epistola), in Melissa, n° 91, p. 16.
1999: "Neo-Latin Language and Literature", in ed. P. Grendler Encyclopaedia of the Renaissance, vol. 4, pp. 289–94.
1999: "Observations on the Style and Language of Lipsius' Prose: A Look at Some Selected Texts", in editoribus G. Tournoy et al. Justus Lipsius Europae Lumen et Columen, Supplementa Humanistica Lovaniensia 15, pp. 169–78.
2000: "Latinitas. The Misdiagnosis of Latin's Rigor Mortis," in ACL Newsletter 22.2, pp. 21–26.
2000: "Cur opera Latina non solum antiqua, sed recentiora etiam omnibus litterarum Latinarum studiosis tam in ludis quam in studiorum universitatibus proponi praelegique debeant." in Retiario, n° 3.1
2001: "De duobus libris recens editis," Retiario, n° 4.1
2001: "De novo instituto Latino", in Melissa, n° 104, anno 2001, p. 1.
2001: "Catalogus Operum Recens Editorum Quae ad Latinitatis Humanisticae et Recentissimae Proprietates Spectant" (Retiarii editio supernumeraria)
2001: "De Marco Antonio Mureto Oratore et Gallo et Romano," Humanistica Lovaniensia 50, pp. 303–27
2002: "Cur opera Latina non solum classica, sed recentiora etiam omnibus litterarum classicarum studiosis proponi praelegique debeant," in editoribus B. Luiselli, E. Palmén, T. PekkanenActa selecta noni conventus Academiae Latinitati Fovendae (Granivici, 6-12 Augusti MCMXCVII), pp. 219–225
2004: (with Minkova) "De rationibus variis quibus homines verba Latina aetate litterarum renatarum enuntiabant", in Melissa, n° 122, anno 2004, pp. 2–7
2004: (with Minkova) Readings and exercises in Latin prose composition : from Antiquity to the Renaissance
2004: "The Latinity of Erasmus and Medieval Latin: Continuities and Discontinuities," Journal of Medieval Latin 14, pp. 145–168
2005: "De litterarum Latinarum perpetuitate: pars altera," Iris 13, pp. 23–24.
2005: (with Minkova) Reading Livy's Rome: selections from books I-VI of Livy's Ab urbe condita
2005: (with Minkova) "Oral Latin: Loquimur Quo Melius Legamus – We Speak to Read Better," in Amphora 4.2, pp. 8–9, 16–17.
2005: "Observations on the Pronunciation of Latin during the Renaissance," The Classical Outlook 82.2, pp. 68–71.
2006: (with Minkova) Mater Anserina: poems in Latin for children
2006: "De moribus Americanorum domesticis," (versio partialis Franciscae TrollopeDomesting Manners of the Americans) in editrice F. Licoppe-DeraedtNavigare Necesse Est: Quattuordecim viatoriae narrationes veste Latina indutae, Miscellanea Gaio Licoppe dicata.
2006: (with Minkova) "De Kentukiano instituto studiis Latinis provehendis," Pars I: “De Instituti ortu et ratione,” in editoribus A. Capellán García, M. D. Alonso Saiz, Acta selecta X Conventus Academiae Latinitati Fovendae (Matriti, 2-7 Septembris 2002), pp. 283–5.
2006: "De Erasmi declamationibus deque declamatiuncula, quae Oratio episcopi inscribitur," Humanistica Lovaniensia 55, pp. 9–23.
2009: (with Minkova) Latin for the New Millennium: Level 2
2012: "De rationibus quibus homines docti artem Latine colloquendi et ex tempore dicendi saeculis XVI et XVII coluerunt," Supplementa humanistica Lovaniensia 31
2013: "Colloquia Familiaria: an Aspect of Ciceronianism Reconsidered," in editrice N. van Deusen Cicero Refused to Die: Ciceronian Influence through the Centuries, 2013, pp. 123–139
2015 "Conversational Latin to 1650" et "Neo-Latin Prose Style (from Petrarch to c. 1650)" in editoribus P. Ford et al. Brill's Encyclopaedia of the Neo-Latin World
References
^"Terence Tunberg". University of Kentucky, Modern & Classical Languages, Literatures & Cultures. University of Kentucky. Retrieved 7 April 2023.