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Topics will include but not be limited to:
I. Overview of literature and literary genres
A. Definitions of literature
B. Overview of literary genres
C. The genre of environmental literature
1. definitions and literary scope of the genre
2. the interdisciplinary nature of the genre
II. Major figures in environmental literature
A. Contributions of nonfiction writers: e.g. Henry David Thoreau,
John Muir, Aldo Leopold, Rachel Carson, Barry Lopez, Annie
Dillard, Wendell Berry, Edward Abbey, Terry Tempest Williams,
N. Scott Momaday
B. Contributions of fiction writers: e.g. Pam Huston, Barry Lopez,
Leslie Marmon Silko
C. Contributions of poets: e.g. Gary Snyder, A.R. Ammons, Mary Oliver
III. Historical patterns and emerging traditions in environmental
literature
A. The pastoral tradition in Greek and Western romantic literature
B. Early American literature: Descriptions of nature and writing
about regions in the 17th- and 18th- centuries
C. Thoreau and the birth of the nature essay in the 19th-century
D. Turn-of-the-Century: Extending the Thoreauvian tradition
E. 20th-century renaissance of American environmental nonfiction
1. literal vs. metaphorical representations of the environment
2. connections with science, art, history, economics, and policy
3. the concept of Place
4. movement from egocentrism to ecocentrism
F. Major contributions of women to American environmental literature:
e.g. Susan Cooper, Mary Austin, Rachel Carson, Annie Dillard, Terry
Tempest Williams, Mary Oliver
IV. Similarities and differences in the ways in which literary works of
different cultures have imagined the human relationship to the
non-human world
A. Oral vs written literary traditions
B. American Indian vs. Western creation stories
C. Conceptions of place in indigenous and Western cultures
D. Cultural perspectives on an "ethical" relationship to the land
V. Ecocriticism: a critical approach to literature and culture
A. Definition of a "critical approach" to literature
B. Overview of other critical approaches: e.g. formalist, historical
deconstruction, psychoanalytic, feminist, reader response
C. Definition of ecocriticism
D. Practice of ecocriticism
VI. Environmental literature and the emerging culture of environmental
concern
A. Ways in which the arts in general and texts in particular both
shape and express values and attitudes towards the natural world
B. Ways in which texts can provoke environmental reflection and practice restorationism
C. Art, advocacy, and activism
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Reading assignments may include:
1. Assigned readings from major works of environmental literature
2. Selected essays on environmental literature as a genre
3. Selected essays offering different cultural perspectives on the
nonhuman world
4. Selected essays on ecocentrism as a critical approach to literature
Writing assignments may include:
1. A structured reading journal on assigned readings
2. Essay exams covering units of study
3. Analytical essays on assigned works (500-1,000 words)
4. Personal essays in response to assigned works (500-1,000 words)
5. Ecocritical analysis of a text, film, or advertisement
6. Term papers requiring research and MLA documentation (1,500-2,500
words)
7. Original student writing in the genre of environmental literature
Other assignments may include:
1. Group or individual presentations on particular authors, time periods
or themes
2. Quizzes: objective and essay examinations
3. Field trips to explore a local ecosystem
4. Group or class project: Based on class readings and personal experience
create a set of ethical and practical
principles (a land ethic) that can serve as a guide for the human relationship to the
land
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The Norton Book of Nature Writing. Ed Robert Finch and John Elder.
W.W. Norton, 2002 or most current edition.
Literature and the Environment. Ed. Lorraine Anderson, Scott Slovic,
And John P. O'Grady. Longman, 1999 (Classic).
The following texts are all classics in the field:
Walden. Henry David Thoreau. 1854
Prairyerth. William Least Heat-Moon. 1991
A Friend of the Earth. T.C. Boyle 2000
Walking. Henry David Thoreau. 1863
The Mountains of California. John Muir. 1894
The Land of Little Rain. Mary Austin. 1903
Silent Spring. Rachel Carson. 1962
Sand County Almanac. Aldo Leopold. 1949
Desert Solitaire. Edward Abbey. 1968
Pilgrim at Tinker Creek. Annie Dillard 1974
Turtle Island. Gary Snyder. 1974
Arctic Dreams. Barry Lopez. 1986
New and Selected Poems. Mary Oliver. 1992
Refuge. Terry Tempest Williams. 1992
The Control of Nature. John McPhee. 1989
Ceremony. Leslie Marmon Silko. 1977
My Antonia. Willa Cather. 1918
That Distant Land. Wendell Berry. 2002