L371 15883 CRITICAL PRACTICES
Lee Sterrenburg
4:00p-5:15p TR (30 students) 3 cr., A&H. Open to English majors
only.
TOPIC: “Environmental Criticism”
PREREQUISITE: L202 with grade of C- or better. NOTE: The English
Department will strictly enforce this prerequisite. Students who
have not completed L202 with a grade of C- or better will have their
registration administratively cancelled.
Our L371 will have two major sections. Both will use a historical
resource book as the basis and grounding, and both will branch out
to institutions’s environmental self-awareness, writing, literature,
and criticism. The first perspective is global, the second local or
regional. The main text for the first will be Jared Diamond’s
Pulitzer Prize-winning study Guns, Germs, and Steel: The Fates of
Human Societies (1998). This work takes a long view of the
fates and interactions of peoples, societies, and environments over
the past 13,000 years. Diamond is especially interested in the
question of how certain societies came to have more “cargo”
(including guns, germs, and steel) than others. His explanations
are anti-racialist and environmental. We will use Diamond’s book
enhance our global and historical perspectives on the making of
cultures on different continents. I expect that our texts might
include translations of Sophocles’ Oedipus Rex, part of
Virgil’s Georgics, and a selection from Thucydides’ account
of the plague of Athens in his Peloponesian War. For
criticism, we’ll at least look at Aristotle’s the Poetics and
Longinus’ essay on the sublime. Those two texts should introduce us
to formalist criticisms that construct themselves by analogy to the
single organism, and to “nature” criticisms that examine
psychological responses to big and sublime entities like the ocean,
mountains, or volcanoes. Thucydides should fit nicely with
the “germs” part of Diamond’s story. Assumptions about stratified
societies and their surroundings play important roles in all these
works. Another set of episodes in Diamond’s global overview has to
do with “Hemispheres Colliding,” and in particular the collision
between the Spanish and the Native Americans of Mexico and Peru in
the New World. The role of writing once more comes to the fore.
Spanish writing on Mexico provided a how to do it manual for the
Conquest of Peru, and also for many subsequent encounters between
Europeans and Native American peoples. Our allied texts for this
discussion will probably include parts Thomas Jefferson’s Notes on
the State of Virginia, the opening sequence of William Prescott’s
History of the Conquest of Mexico, and perhaps a James
Fenimore Cooper novel.
The second major section of our L371 course will move us from the
global to the local. By local, I mean the state of Indiana and our
own immediate surroundings in Bloomington and its greater environs.
It is not enough just to read about environments. We also need to
think about how we actually live in our environments and experience
them. Our major resource book for this unit will be the Indiana
Department of Natural Resources and Indiana Academy of Science
publication, The Natural Heritage of Indiana. The book has
chapters on many different kinds of things one might need to know in
order to inhabit, appreciate, and understand an environment. Topics
in this book range from land, soils, wetlands, the Ice Age, and
extinct mammals to Native Americans, settlement, deforestation,
writing, and the emergence of protection and the natural preserves
and state parks of Indiana. Some of our accompanying texts will
probably include at least two books by Indiana writers, Gene
Stratton-Porter’s novel A Girl of the Limberlost and Edwin
Way Teale’s autobiography of his boyhood near Chesterton, Indiana,
Dune Boy. We’ll think about these writings in formal and
literary terms, and we’ll also think about them as works that
perhaps eventually helped to make and shape changes in the Indiana
environment. That is, writing does not just reflect, depict, or
represent the surrounding environment; writing can also help to
create the surrounding environment. We’ll ask how writing and
criticism can actively help us to enhance our own personal
experience in our immediate surroundings. I hope to have a few
outside speakers visit the course, including perhaps one or two of
the contributors to the Natural Heritage of Indiana volume.
We will also take a number of walks and field trips to significant
Indiana environments.
Student work in the course will probably consist of a mid-term exam,
a final exam, two papers of circa 8-10 page length, a series of
short (one or two paragraph length) working papers, and some short
in-class response statements.