UW-Milwaukee - College of Letters and Science

English 247-103
Literature and Human Experience: Literature of Ecological Vision

Instr: Jeff Poniewaz
Office: CRT 288; 229-5007
e-mail: poniewaz@uwm.edu
Office hours: TBA
Course Information: T 6:00pm - 8:40pm; Shorewood High School, 1701 E. Capitol Drive, Science Bldg., Rm. TBA

Course Description

This course will appeal to those who love Nature and are interested in ecology as well as to those who love great writing in general. We'll begin with Nature-centered American Indian cosmology as contrasted with post-Columbus European adversity to wilderness--an adversity that escalated in the wake of the Industrial Revolution. Amid that dominant attitude toward the conquest of Nature, we'll discover strong dissident ecological inklings among the Romantic poets. From there we'll trace ecological vision in American literature from Emerson, Whitman and Thoreau to the present. Through our reading and discussion we'll develop an understanding of ecology and will attempt to find a path of reconciliation between humankind and Nature. Along the way we will discern an Ecological Revolution that could become as influential and pervasive as the Industrial Revolution and thereby offset -just in the nick of time- the Nature-destroying tendencies of the latter. We will examine some of the key texts that evince breakthrough ecological vision and at the same time qualify as great literature.

 

Wedge