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Environmental Destruction:

An Introduction to the Environmental Humanities

What can the humanities teach us about our current environmental crisis? This question is at the heart of the “environmental humanities,”          which consider the ways that humans are entangled in a world with plants, animals, and other “things” that are framed as “natural resources.”

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“Environmental Destruction” will focus on the ideological causes, palpable effects, and imagined futures linked to humans' destruction of our environments. In addition to one traditional paper you'll produce podcasts on the history of early conservation or preservation efforts and  digital essays that introduce pressing environmental problems by situating them in a longer historical, literary, and cultural context. 

Course Texts​

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Additional readings are posted on Canvas.

Assignments

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Assignment details are linked to each title.

Course Schedule and Classrooms:
Section A: TR 12:45-2, Room 1505, Wake Downtown
Section B: TR 2:15-3:30, Room 1505, Wake Downtown

ENG 331/661: TR 5:00-6:15, Tribble C115 
See Course Policies and Campus Resources here.

Schedule of Readings and Assignments

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Week 1:  Introductions 

August 27:  In class: Introductions

                    In class: Syllabus and Assignments

August 29: No Class 

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Week 2:  Ralph Waldo Emerson

September 3: Emerson, Nature, excerpts

September 5: Emerson, Nature, excerpts

                    Emerson, "The Young American," excerpts

                    Emerson; Natural History of the Intellect, excerpts

                    "Giving Emerson the Boot"
 

Week 3:  Henry David Thoreau 

September 10: Thoreau, Walden, “Economy," “Where I Lived"

September 12: Thoreau, Walden, “Higher Laws, “Conclusion”

                        “Pond Scum: Thoreau’s Moral Myopia”

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  • To learn about the history and genres of environmental literature 

  • To situate that literature within a number of relevant contexts

  • To improve close reading skills

  • To conduct research and engage with primary sources 

  • To produce, support, and revise argumentative essays

  • To apply your thinking about literature and history to contemporary environmental issues

  • To consider and practice sharing information with both peer and public audiences

  • To share and collaboratively develop ideas about literature, environmental issues, and your own writing

Learning Outcomes   

Week 4:  Westward the Course of Empire Takes its Way

September 17:  Thoreau, “Walking,” 71-122   

September 19:  Turner, “The Significance of the Frontier"

                          “U.S. Expansion and its Consequences,”

                          Oxford Handbook of American Indian History

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Week 5:  John Muir

September 24: John Muir, Essential Muir, 3-83

                           Discuss Podcast Assignment 

September 26: John Muir, Essential Muir, 87-126

                          “Environmentalism’s Racist History”

                           Podcast Topics & Preference Forms Due
 

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Weeks 6-8: Preservation and Conservation Podcasts

September 24: Discuss Podcast Assignment

September 26: Topic & Group Preference Forms Due

October 1: Kline, First Along the River

    Discuss Conservation and Preservation 

                          Discuss Research and Scholarly Sources

October 3: Proposals Due; Project Group Meetings

October 8: Introduction to Podcasting with Brianna Derr

October 10: Work-in-Progress Presentations to get ideas from the class 

October 15: Script Workshops and Table Reads 

October 17: No Class: Fall Break

November 3: Projects Due 

Week 9:  Hurricane Katrina and Environmental Justice

October 22: Natasha Trethewey, Beyond Katrina, 1-70

October 24: Natasha Trethewey, Beyond Katrina, 71-123

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Week 10: Oil and Climate Change

October 29: Stephanie LeMenager, Living Oil: Petroleum Culture, 3-19, 102-141.

October 31: “Oil Stories” by Tim Gautreaux, Joanna Kavenna, and Mohammed Hasan Alwan

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Week 11: Standing Rock 

November 5: Estes and Dhillon, Standing with Standing Rock, introduction 

                       AWAKE: A Dream from Standing Rock 

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Week 11-15: Final Projects​: Digital Essays for environmentaldestruction.org

November 7: Go over assignment and strategies for successful digital essays.

                       Listen to Class Podcasts
November 12: Group Meetings: Go over research and framing ideas

November 14: Tech Workshop: How to use Adobe Rush 

November 19: Group Meetings: Go over proposals
November 21: Narrative Workshop: Pitch your ideas to the class

November 26: Script Workshop: Go over your drafts 

November 28: No Class; Thanksgiving Break

December 3: Final Questions, Conclusions, & Evaluations

December 5: Draft Workshops 

December 11: Projects Due

December 11: Reflective Writing Due

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