ENGL 374
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Writing Climate Justice
Department(s)
Course Description
This course considers how imaginative writing can intervene in the most existential of neoliberalism's myriad catastrophes: the climate crisis. Through the reading of contemporary novels, poetry, nonfiction, and ecocritical theory, course participants will explore literature's ability to illuminate the environmental injustices of the present perilous moment and to help realize a just and sustainable future for all. Emphasizing writing as a form of activism, ENGL374 studies the work of authors from around the globe, including Sheila Watt-Cloutier, Kathy Jetnil-Kijiner, Nnedi Okorafor, Cherie Dimaline, and Camille Dungy. Discussion of course readings encompasses a range of topics essential to understanding climate justice, including Indigenous rights, immigration justice, ecofeminism, and queer ecology. The course has three main assignments: an essay in which students place an ecocritical concept and a literary text in conversation; a creative writing assignment in which students themselves produce a short piece of climate change literature in a genre of their choosing; and a collaborative, student-designed final project that uses the skills and knowledge developed during the semester to engage the climate crisis beyond the classroom.
Course Typically Offered
Offered frequently.
Career
Undergraduate
Catalog Course Attributes
CO24 - ARTHUM (Artistic and Humanistic), INTD - BIOE (Bioethics BIOE), INTD - ENVH (Env Arts & Humanities ENVH ESS), INTD - EPDM (Env Pol & Decision EPDM ENVR), INTD - STS (Sci Tech Health Society STHS)
Min Units
1
Max Units
1
Name
Lecture
Optional Component
No
Final Exam Type
Yes