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Remediating the Environment

ENGL 2596.401
also offered as: CIMS 2506
instructor(s):
MW 5:15-6:44pm

 

This course can be counted as an elective toward the Environmental Humanities minor and as fulfilling the minor's public engagement component.

In this course, we will interrogate the term “remediation” as meaning both environmental restoration and media representation. Students will be introduced to the fields of ecocriticism and ecomedia by examining how a variety of materials—from bestselling books to billboards, documentaries, and websites—have informed the cultural imagination of the environment. Students will also discover how media communications and publications can help to remediate the environment in the face of climate catastrophe. Weekly readings will include touchstone works of environmental scholarship and literature including Rachel Carson’s Silent Spring and Octavia E. Butler’s Parable of the Sower. We will also examine non-print media such as NHPR’s podcast Windfall and experimental work such as Lucien Castaing-Taylor and Verena Paravel’s film, Leviathan

Course readings (and viewings and listenings and lookings) as well as assignments will emphasize publicly engaged work. Throughout the semester, students will be tasked with creating small- and large-scale creative publications that communicate with and about the environment—from zines to Tik Toks to protest banners. For their final project, students will have the opportunity to create a publication in collaboration with a community organization that serves the public. We will ask questions such as: How does one effectively collaborate with a multi-faceted organization? How does one identify and reach an audience? What publics do publications serve—and which media are best suited to environmental remediation? 

 

 

English Major Requirements
  • Sector 1 Theory and Poetics (AETP)
  • Sector 6 20th & 21st Centuries (AE20)
English Concentration Attributes
  • 20th-21st Century Concentration (AE21)
  • Literature, Journalism, & Print Culture Concentration (AELJ)
  • Theory & Cultural Studies Concentration (AETC)
College Attributes
Additional Attributes