HI 570
U.S. Environmentalism
Fall, 2007
Boston University
R. S. Deese
Course Goal: To trace the development of American environmental thought, culture, and politics from the late nineteenth century to the early twenty-first century. The primary theme of this course will be the evolving relationship between conceptions of progress and nature in American history, as reflected in what historian Donald Worster has called the “imperial” and “Arcadian” strains of modern ecological thought. This course will begin with the publication of Man and Nature by George Perkins Marsh in 1864, and survey the major developments in American environmental thought and politics through the Gilded Age, Progressive Era, New Deal, Cold War, and the post-Cold War decades. Students will be required to write two book reviews, give one class presentation, and write one 15-20 page research paper. The reading assignments for each week, including handouts, should be completed by every Thursday in order to assure an informed discussion. Attendance and participation will account for 20 per cent of each student’s final course grade.
Grade Breakdown:
20%: Class Participation
20%: Book Review 1 (due in class on 9/27)
15% Class Presentation (TBA)
20%: Book Review 2 (due in class on 10/25)
25%: Research Paper (due in class on 12/11)
REQUIRED TEXTS:
Carson, R. - Silent Spring: 40th Anniv. Edition (HM), ISBN 978-0-6-1824906-0
Cronon, W. - Uncommon Ground, (Norton), ISBN 978-0-3-9331511-0
Hays, S. - Conservation and the Gospel of Efficiency, 59 (UCP), ISBN 978-0-8-2295702-7
Leopold, A. - Sand County Almanac, (Random), ISBN 978-0-3-4534505-9
McNeill, J.R. - Something New Under the Sun, (Norton), ISBN 978-0-3-9332183-8
Phillips, S. - This Land, This Nation, (Cambridge), ISBN 978-0-5-2161796-3
Sale, K. – The Green Revolution, (Ingram), ISBN 978-0-8-0901551-1
Worster, D. - Nature's Economy, 2nd (Cambridge), ISBN 978-0-5-2146834-3
Basic Ground Rules:
1. Turn off all cell phones, beepers, etc. before all class meetings begin.
2. Always come on time to all class meetings, and participate in all discussions. Please don’t be shy about speaking up in class discussions, and don’t be afraid to ask questions. Virtually all original scholarship begins by posing questions that others have overlooked or dismissed as simply not worth asking; therefore, the very question you might be afraid to ask because it seems naïve or unorthodox could well be the most interesting and groundbreaking question that anyone could raise. Don’t hesitate to ask it. Also, please remember that I am more than happy to field your questions and address your concerns via email, telephone, and during my regular office hours.
3. Always come to class prepared to discuss all readings for that week. When you do the assigned reading each week, be sure to underline passages that you see as important, and write down questions that you would like to raise in our section meetings and in my office hours.
Term Paper: For this course you will be required to write a 15-20 page research paper that explores the scientific, cultural, and political dimensions of a single environmental issue within a specific historical context. Your Student Presentation will be based on your research paper.
Regulations Against Plagiarism: Needless to say, the work you present must be entirely your own and all sources must be diligently credited in your footnotes and bibliography. Any attempt at plagiarism, representing the work of another person as your own, will be result in failure in this course and severe disciplinary action by Boston University. If you should need more information on this subject, consult the website of the History Department.
Week One
9/4: Introduction
9/6: George Perkins Marsh and the Gilded Age
Donald Worster, Nature’s Economy pp. 1-111
David Lowenthal, George Perkins Marsh, HANDOUT
Week Two
9/11: Pinchot, Muir, and the Progressive Era
9/13: Hetch Hetchy
Donald Worster, Nature’s Economy, pp. 114-253
Samuel P. Hays, Conservation and the Gospel of Efficiency, FINISH.
Anne Whiston Spirn, “Constructing Nature” Uncommon Ground, pp. 91-113
John Muir, A Thousand Mile Walk to the Gulf, HANDOUT
Gifford Pinchot, Breaking New Ground, HANDOUT
Mary Hunter Austin, Land of Little Rain, HANDOUT
Week Three
9/18: The Natural and Technological Sublime
9/20: Reshaping Nature
Sarah T. Phillips, This Land, This Nation, FINISH
David E. Nye, The American Technological Sublime, HANDOUT
Julian Huxley, What Dare I Think?, HANDOUT
Robinson Jeffers, “Shine, Perishing Republic” & “The Purse Seine”: HANDOUT
Week Four
9/25: Dr. New Deal, Dr. Win the War, & Dr. Strangelove
9/27: Aldo Leopold and the Birth of Cold War Environmentalism
Donald Worster, Nature’s Economy, pp.256-338
Aldo Leopold, Sand County Almanac, FINISH
Mark Fiege, “The Sense of Wonder” Environmental History July 2007: HANDOUT
Ramachandra Guha, How Much Should a Person Consume? Ch. 6, HANDOUT
Week Five
10/2: The Atomic Age
10/4: Fallout
Donald Worster, Nature’s Economy, FINISH.
Aldous Huxley, selections from Ape and Essence and The Human Situation, HANDOUT
Thomas Kuhn, The Structure of Scientific Revolutions, HANDOUT
Week Six
10/9: Rachel Carson, Oceanographer and Naturalist
10/11: Reaction to Silent Spring
Rachel Carson, Silent Spring, FINISH
Aldous Huxley, Island, HANDOUT
Week Seven
10/16: The Quiet Crisis
10/18: Earth Day, 1970
Kirkpatrick Sale, The Green Revolution, FINISH
Stewart Brand, The Whole Earth Catalogue, HANDOUT
Shepard Krech, III, The Ecological Indian, HANDOUT
Press Clippings on Earth Day, 1970: HANDOUT
Week Eight
10/23: Ecofeminism
10/25: “Deep Ecology”
Carolyn Merchant, “Reinventing Eden” in William Cronon, ed., Uncommon Ground, pp. 132-159
George Sessions and Bill Devall, Deep Ecology, HANDOUT
Week Nine
10/30: The Monkey Wrench Gang
11/1: Something New Under the Sun
J.R. McNeill, Something New Under the Sun, pp. 1-117
Edward Abbey The Monkey Wrench Gang, HANDOUT
Week Ten
11/6: The Reagan Era and After
11/8: Earth Day, 1990
J.R. McNeill, Something New Under the Sun, pp. 118-227
Press Clippings on Earth Day, 1990: HANDOUT
Week Eleven
11/13: The End of Nature?
11/15: Post-Cold War Environmentalism
J.R. McNeill, Something New Under the Sun, FINISH
Bill McKibben, The End of Nature, HANDOUT
Week Twelve
11/20: Ecocriticism
11/22: The Trouble With Wilderness
Lawrence Buell, The Future of Environmental Criticism, HANDOUT
Ramachandra Guha, How Much Should a Person Consume? Ch.9, HANDOUT
William Cronon, “The Trouble With Wilderness” Uncommon Ground, pp. 69-90
Week Thirteen
11/27: “Everybody talks about the weather…”
11/29: Visions and Revisions; Student Presentations / Peer Review
Richard White, “Are You an Environmentalist, or Do You Work for a Living?” Uncommon Ground, pp. 171-185
Jennifer Price, “Looking for Nature at the Mall” Uncommon Ground, pp. 186-203
Week Fourteen
12/4: Student Presentations / Peer Review
12/6: Student Presentations / Peer Review
Susan G. Davis, “Touch the Magic” Uncommon Ground, pp. 204-217
Week Fifteen
12/11: All Term Papers Due in Class
Cronon, et al. “Toward a Conclusion” Uncommon Ground, pp. 447-459
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