English 375:
American Literature and the Environment




Description

American Literature and the Environment considers the ways writers and artists have imagined the North American environment: the country and the city, the “natural” and the constructed, the inhabited and the abandoned. We’ll discuss representations of trees, forests, deserts, mountains, cities, cemeteries, houses, shopping malls, highways, subways, derelict buildings, and the secret places known only to children and the homeless. We’ll think about the way places change through the seasons and over geologic spans of time. And we’ll consider the inhabitants of different kinds of places: from “charismatic megafauna” in panoramic landscapes to the baroque colonies of microbes that inhabit our bodies.

Like Koyaanisqatsi, a mesmerizing film we’ll watch at our first meeting, this seminar will attempt to alter our spatial and temporal modes of perception through defamiliarization. The “natural” will become fantastic, and the mundane immanent with hidden meaning.  What if changes in the built environment—the ones we’ve barely noticed—tell us more about the trajectory of our civilization than market-tested political disinformation?  What if trees sprouted feathers instead of leaves? And the ground grew hands instead of grass? What if meditation changed our sense of time, and we could see trees and vines strangling each other for light and water while mountains melt away like heated butter? What if nature is really more like the Museum of Jurassic Technology and Alburtus Seba’s Cabinet of Natural Curiosities than your biology textbook for all its technical insight and practical applicability? As John Stilgoe says in our first reading: Outside Lies Magic.  

But this magic has a dark side, and the outside world can be terrifying as well as sublime: urban disintegration, global warming, nuclear apocalypse, the destruction of the landscapes that make us who we are, and, with that destruction, the insidious contamination of our bodies from fetal malformation to premature death by cancer.  What is in that water you are drinking?  As nature goes, so goes the human body.  And the future looks grim just as the past (the pastoral?) seems increasingly ideal, and, by the end of the course, we’ll know more about what it means to be thinkers, writers, adventurers, survivors, teachers, and eco-warriors in a time of radical environmental disruption.

To that end, we’ll read about one book each week. Some of these books will be deep and complex, some of them brisk and adventuresome. Some will be self-consciously literary; others will emphasize the relation between texts and images and texts and the physical world. Of course, we’ll read some of the most famous and influential works of American environmental writing: Thoreau’s Walden, Rachel Carson’s Silent Spring, and Jane Jacobs’ Death and Life of Great American Cities.  We’ll reconsider Whitman’s Leaves of Grass, among other works, through the ecocritical lens of Lawrence Buell (“godfather of the movement” and my grad-school mentor).  We’ll read several more recent contributions to the tradition of environmental writing such as Terry Tempest Williams’ Refuge, John Edgar Wideman’s Philadelphia Fire, and Wendell Berry's great novel, Jayber Crow.  We'll consider the strange textuality of trees with Audubon Field Guide in hand, as well as the astonishing work of Thomas Pakenham. We’ll explore the photographs and writings of the urban adventurer Camilo Jose Vergara as he explores American Ruins, and, following his lead—and that of the authors of Invisible Frontier—we’ll learn about the new urban exploration movement (bring rope and flashlights). I’ll also introduce you to my recent work on nineteenth-century memorial landscapes (i.e., old, ruinous cemeteries). And, of course, you will do some environmental exploration and meditation of your own. 

The class meets once per week on Wednesday evenings for lecture, film screenings, group discussion, adventures, and writing exercises. These exercises may include learning how to describe things like tarantulas, peacock feathers, and mastodon bones with technical accuracy and style; searching the Hope campus for unnoticed and mysterious places; and learning how to hear and smell and feel.  As Wavy Gravy, the sixties guru, said, the real trick is to “Be Here Now.” In addition to reading, the course requirements include attendance of all classes, weekly brief writing exercises and peer reviews, three substantial contributions to the online discussion board, and a 15-page paper (or the negotiable, hybridized equivalent in images, video, audio, and/or Web site development) on your semester-long environmental explorations (e.g., “Subterranean Hope College,” “From Winter to Spring on the Lake Michigan Beach,” “A Hundred Years in Prospect Park”).

“American Literature and the Environment” will provide you with an introduction to the main currents of American ecocriticism, and it will give you motivation, models, support, and feedback for creating a substantial work of environmental writing, largely of your own devising.  The course usually appeals to students of literature, creative writing, and the sciences, as well as to social activists and outdoor adventurers—we get an unusual mix, so you don’t need to worry if your route to the class seems indirect or circuitous.  Weirdness—up to a point—is an advantage.   The course will not assume any previous knowledge of ecocriticism or environmentalism, but, assuming your commitment to the work, it will pave the way for a deeper understanding of both. And, quite honestly, I hope it will change your life.  Four credit hours.



Schedule

Wednesday, January 17, 6:00-8:50 PM, Lubbers 122: This meeting is an introduction to the big ideas, experiences, and expectations of the course, along with a filmic exercise in environmental perception. We’ll review the syllabus and the "Environmental Exploration Project". I’ll provide an introduction to environmental literature in America (with lots of usable terminology and macro-concepts). Photos will be taken for the course face sheets, and you’ll sign up for three Discussion Board Essays. We’ll conclude with a screening of Koyaanisqatsi (83 minutes) and a discussion of it. FYI, all of the required books are available at the college bookstore, though, of course, they can also be obtained from online booksellers at a discount.

Wednesday, January 24, 6:00-8:50 PM, Lubbers 122: This week is about learning to look more carefully at our surroundings (“natural and built”) and discovering ways to organize and research these observations. For class, read Outside Lies Magic and Invisible Frontier. Begin the Environmental Exploration Project (EEP) after doing most of this reading (start early). Your first EEP assignment is due tonight, and we’ll discuss these books in conjunction with the places you have chosen to explore. I won’t collect EEP #1 until next week, but be ready to talk about your place tonight and read from what you have written so far. Also, we’ll screen Echoes of Forgotten Places (43 minutes), and, if time allows, I’ll present my own EEP of the last three years: "The Legacy of the Rural Cemetery Movement in America.” Please note that your name should be listed below three times as a Discussion Board Essay (DBE) writer; you'll need to work ahead of schedule to post your essay by 5PM the day before class (Julie Kocsis, Andrew Jakobcic, Chelsea Lynes). Notify me if you are not listed three times (use "edit" and "find" to locate your name).

Wednesday, January 31, 6:00-8:50 PM, Lubbers 122: This week is about deepening our understanding of the history, development, and future of eco-/environmental criticism and its applications to American literary and cultural studies. For class, read Lawrence Buell’s The Future of Environmental Criticism, about which we'll have some discussion. A revised and expanded version of your EEP #1 will be collected tonight; please bring two copies every time (each week your essay will be peer reviewed, evaluated by me, and returned the next week). Assigned Discussion Board Essays (DBEs) on the reading (Buell) are due online by 5PM on Tuesday (Susan Krueger, Andrew Jakobcic, Stephen Cupery). Please comment on these postings on DISCUS before class.

Wednesday, February 7, 6:00-8:50 PM, Lubbers 122: This week we are getting to know the most famous and influential figure in American environmental writing, where he lived, and what he claims to have lived for. Henry David Thoreau published Walden in 1854 after years of condensing, enriching, and revising his journal writings about living near a pond in Massachusetts. It was the greatest exercise in backyard camping in American literary history. Read the editor’s introduction and the chapters from “Economy” to “Visitors.” Walden is so important--and complex—that we’re spreading the reading over two weeks, with your EEP assignments designed to emulate Thoreau’s methods. Before you write your EEP #2 this week, I want you to read, “Sick of Nature” by David Gessner. Two copies of your EEP #2 are due tonight for peer review (returned immediately) and feedback from me (to be returned next week), which will be our pattern until the last assignment. I’ll lecture on Thoreau (giving you the scholarly basics), we’ll discuss the first several chapters of Walden along with your writing (EEPs and DBEs), and we’ll screen David Marlin’s filmic introduction to Walden Pond (27 minutes). Note there will be two EEP essays due next week. Discussion Board Essays (DBEs) on the reading are due online by 5PM (Courtney Muir, Stephen Cupery, Lindsey Manthei) on Tuesday (yesterday—contact CIT or me if you have a problem posting).

Wednesday, February 14: No class; Monday schedule in effect.

Wednesday, February 21, 6:00-8:50 PM, Lubbers 122: Finish Walden, reading from “The Bean-Field” to “Conclusion.” DBEs--which we'll discuss--are due online yesterday, 5PM (Julie Kocsis, Rachele Thomas, Lance Postma, Chelsea Lynes); two copies of EEPs #3 and #4 are due tonight, which we'll review and talk about. We'll also have some exercises in the precise and perceptive description of natural objects (any scientists in the class who want to use their special expertise to help with this should let me know ahead of time), and the relationship between the mundane and the sublime. And we'll discuss using senses other than the visual, and we'll screen Inhaling the Spore a video tour of the Museum of Jurassic Technology (35 minutes).

Wednesday, February 28, 6:00-8:50 PM, Lubbers 122: Walt Whitman met Thoreau at least once, and they didn’t quite understand each other: Thoreau loved solitude, Whitman loved comradeship; Thoreau preferred nature; Whitman preferred the city. Still, as American romantics, they had much in common, even if they express the basic tensions of American environmental writing. For tonight, read Whitman’s Leaves of Grass (1855 edition, which is much shorter than later editions—make sure you have the right one). We’ll discuss your writing tonight (two copies of EEP #5 are due); I’ll lecture on Whitman and ecocriticsm, we’ll discuss his work in relation to Thoreau’s, We'll have some exercises in catalogue rhetoric, the taxonomic impusle, and perceiving (constructing?) linkages and patterns involving seemingly disparate objects, and, if time allows, we’ll have a partial screening of New York: A Documentary Film, episode two (about 40 minutes), which contextualizes Whitman in his time and place. DBEs are due online yesterday, 5PM (Courtney Muir, Annika Carlson, Emily Hunt), and we'll discuss them too.

Wednesday, March 7, 6:00-8:50 PM, Lubbers 122: Following Whitman’s prompt to think of cities and people as “Nature,” we’ll take a huge leap into the mid-twentieth century (and away from the writings of romantic guys) to read Jane Jacobs, Death and Life of Great American Cities , which completely revolutionized the way we think of urban life—particularly highways and housing projects—after 1961. As usual, we’ll talk about your writing (two copies of EEP #6 are due), I’ll lecture a bit on urban studies, we’ll have partial screening of New York: A Documentary Film, episode seven (about 50 minutes), which contextualizes Jacobs in her time and place, and we'll practice a bit of reflection on "toxic discourse." Of course, DBEs are due yesterday, 5PM (Julie Kocsis, Rachele Thomas, Annika Carlson, Kate Masterton), and we'll talk about those too.

Wednesday, March 14, 6:00-8:50 PM, Lubbers 122: If Jane Jacobs changed the way Americans thought about the city, Rachel Carson’s landmark book, Silent Spring, published the following year, changed the way Americans thought about the relationship between human needs, corporate profits, and the degraded biosphere. Read Silent Spring, about which I'll lecture and we'll have some discussion. DBEs are due yesterday, 5PM (Susan Krueger, Andrew Jakobcic, Lance Postma, Chelsea Lynes, Kate Masterton); two copies of EEP #7 are due tonight. We'll discuss your writing, of course, have a writing exercise, and, if time allows, have a partial Screening of An Inconvenient Truth (about 50 minutes) and The People’s Century: Environmentalism (about 30 minutes).

Wednesday, March 21: Spring Break, no class.

Wednesday, March 28, 6:00-8:50 PM, Lubbers 122: Terry Tempest Williams' Refuge is an extraordinarily moving, symbolic, autobiographical memoir about the linkage between a Mormon family and the environment as the author's mother dies of cancer. Read the whole book for class; I'll lecture a little about ecofeminism among other topics, and we'll discuss the book, along with recent writing about nuclear testing and its impact on the American population (I'll show some footage about this too). As usual, DBEs are due yesterday, 5PM (Lindsey Manthei, Kate Masterton), and two copies of your EEP #8 is due. We discuss all of these and have a linked writing exercise too.

Wednesday, April 4, 6:00-8:50 PM, Lubbers 122: John Edgar Wideman's Philadelphia Fire is a novel based on the bombing of the compound of the Afro-centric, back-to-nature MOVE organization in 1985. It is, perhaps, the most the complex and postmodern of the works we'll consider; it looks back to themes of community in the city that we discussed in relation to Whitman and Jacobs, and it looks ahead to next week's more visually-oriented material on the city. I'll lecture about the MOVE group (whose activities and destruction I partly witnessed), and we'll try to analyze this book in terms of what we have learned about ecocriticism. As usual, DBEs are due yesterday, 5PM (Courtney Muir, Lindsey Manthei, Annika Carlson), and two copies of your EEP #9 is due--we'll review and discuss those as well.

Wednesday, April 11, 6:00-8:50 PM, Lubbers 122: This week, we’ll consider the role of photography-and-text in the history of place studies, past and the present, with a focus on its use as a political tool as well as an expressive art form. Peruse How the Other Half Lives by Jacob Riis and American Ruins, New American Ghetto, and How the Other Half Worships by Camilo Jose Vergara, all on reserve at Van Wylen Library (just be sure not to all show up at the reserve desk just before class!). Spend a minimum of 90 minutes with these books. I'll bring copies to class to aid our discussion, and I'll lecture a bit on the history and developments in urban and environmental photography. DBEs are due yesterday, 5PM (Rachele Thomas, Susan Krueger, Emily Hunt); two copies of EEP #10 are due tonight; we'll review and discuss these two. We’ll also screen Dark Days (84 minutes), one of the more important documentaries on the urban homeless and a follow-up to our early discussions of urban exploration.

Wednesday, April 18, 6:00-8:50 PM, Lubbers 122: Wendell Berry’s novel, Jayber Crow, emphasizes the themes of stewardship, community, and finding a rooted place for oneself in an increasingly disorienting culture. It reaches back to the beginnings of the course to Whitman and Thoreau, and, before them, to the older Christian tradition. I’ve never read this novel (reputedly his best), so it will be an opportunity for all of us to apply what we’ve learned to a new text without an established critical reception. Some of us may even want to use this reading as a basis to talk with Berry himself, since he will soon be at Hope to receive an honorary degree. So, read the novel for class (it’s longer than most of our readings, so you might not quite finish it, but I hope you’ll continue with it in time for Berry’s visit.) DBEs, which we'll discuss, are due yesterday, 5PM (Lance Postma, Stephen Cupery, Micaela Cypher, Emily Hunt); no EEP is due tonight, but the last one will be returned in anticipation of your reworking all of them into a coherent presentation for next week (I'll give you the specifics about this tonight, and we'll talk about strategies for rewriting and presenting your work).

Wednesday, April 25, 6:00-8:50 PM (possibly later), Lubbers 122: Environmental Exploration Projects presented tonight in alphabetical order. You might want to come early to make sure your A/V works, if you plan to use any.

Friday, May 4, 5PM (my office, Lubbers 318): Final version of Environmental Exploration Projects due.