Literature and the Environment, Fall 2008

Literature and the Environment, Fall 2008

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What is ecology? What is nature? What is ecological literature? In this class Timothy Morton, professor of English and nature and culture, investigates these profound and very urgent questions. In Morton’s recent book Ecology without Nature, he argues that environmental art needs rethinking on a deep and massive scale. Literary studies needs to acknowledge the extent to which every work of art is environmental, in the same way as every work of art is about gender, race, and class. This means that even texts that are not explicitly “about” the environment (animals, trees, mountains … etc.) have what Morton calls “environmentality.” Thus there are some texts that are environmental in form as well as in content. This class will challenge you to develop reading skills and philosophical depth to investigate one of the most important areas of literature and culture today.

Recent Episodes

  • Edges, Margins, Silence

    16 years ago
  • Edges, Margins, Silence 2

    16 years ago
  • Materialities

    16 years ago
  • Foreground and Background

    16 years ago
  • Inside and Outside

    16 years ago
  • Inside and Outside 2

    16 years ago
  • Animals

    16 years ago
  • History of Environmental Form 1

    16 years ago
  • Creativity in the Face of Climate Change

    16 years ago
  • History of Environmental Form 2

    16 years ago