Spring 2019 Class Schedule
Course | Title | Instructor | Lecture | Department |
---|---|---|---|---|
ENVR_POL 309 | American Environmental History | Woodhouse | TTH 9:30-10:50 | Environmental Policy and Culture |
ENVR_POL 309 American Environmental HistoryThis course will survey American history from the colonial era to the present with two premises in mind: that the natural world is not simply a passive background to human history but rather an active participant, and that human attitudes toward nature are both shaped by and in turn shape social, political, and economic behavior. The course will cover formal schools of thought about the natural world - from transcendentalism to the conservation and environmental movements - but also discuss the many informal intersections of human activity and natural systems, from European colonialism to property regimes, migration and transportation, industry, consumer practices, war, technological innovation, political ideology, and food production. Taught with History 309; students may not receive credit for both courses. | ||||
Bio coming soon | ||||
ENVR_POL 390-21 | Special Topics in Policy & Culture: Politics of Disaster A Global Env. History | Barnett | TTH 9:30-10:50 | Environmental Policy and Culture |
ENVR_POL 390-21 Special Topics in Policy & Culture: Politics of Disaster A Global Env. HistoryThe term ‘natural disaster' conjures images of tsunamis, earthquakes, volcanoes, and other powerful forces of nature that strike without warning, inflicting massive suffering on a powerless and unsuspecting populace. We now have several decades' worth of research from the social sciences and humanities showing that so-called "natural" disasters are not very natural at all. Instead, they are deeply political and profoundly man-made. This course adopts a historical and global approach in order to denaturalize disaster. From famines in British India to earthquakes in post-colonial Peru, from floods in New Orleans to nuclear disaster in Japan, we will see how disasters expose and exacerbate pre-existing inequalities, inflicting suffering disproportionately among those groups already marginalized by race, class, gender, geography, and age. These inequalities shape not only the impact of the disaster but the range of responses to it, including political critique and retrenchment, relief and rebuilding efforts, memorialization, and planning - or failing to plan - for future disasters of a similar kind. The course culminates in a unit on the contemporary challenge of anthropogenic global climate change, the ultimate man-made disaster. We will consider how memories, fears, and fantasies of past disasters are being repurposed to create new visions of what climate change will look like. | ||||
Bio coming soon | ||||
ENVR_POL 390-22 | Special Topics in Environmental Policy & Culture: Energy in American History | Woodhouse | TTH 3:30-4:50 | Environmental Policy and Culture |
ENVR_POL 390-22 Special Topics in Environmental Policy & Culture: Energy in American HistoryThis course will examine energy use in American history, ranging from the use of wood and water in colonial | ||||
Bio coming soon | ||||
ENVR_POL 390-23 | Special Topics in Environmental Policy & Culture: Black Ecology | Zorach | TH 2-4:50 | Environmental Policy and Culture |
ENVR_POL 390-23 Special Topics in Environmental Policy & Culture: Black Ecology | ||||
Bio coming soon | ||||
ENVR_POL 390-24 | Special Topics in Environmental Policy & Culture: Media, Earth and Making a Difference | Taylor | F 2-4:30 | Environmental Policy and Culture |
ENVR_POL 390-24 Special Topics in Environmental Policy & Culture: Media, Earth and Making a Difference | ||||
Bio coming soon | ||||
ENVR_POL 399 | Independent Study | Arranged | | Environmental Policy & Culture |
ENVR_POL 399 Independent StudyIndependent project in student's area of interest. Readings and conferences. Comprehensive term paper required. Prerequisite: consent of program director. | ||||
Bio coming soon |