ECOLIT: Reading and Writing the Landscape
English 380/HNR X380
Where is the literature which gives expression to Nature? He would be a poet who could impress the winds and streams into his service, to speak for him ...whose words were so true, and fresh, and natural that they would appear to expand like the buds at the approach of spring, though they lay half smothered between two musty leaves in a library... . (Henry David Thoreau)
Week | Date | Topic | Primary
Texts [required and due; please print and bring to class] |
Secondary
Texts and other Resources |
Writing [dates assigned and due] |
Landscape | Natural History Topics |
I | 1/4 |
The Ancient Pastoral Tradition |
Bible, Genesis 1 Cal Poly Land: A Field Guide, preface, introduction, Places, The Arts chapters
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Association for the Study of Literature and the Environment[ASLE] |
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Cal Poly Land
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II | 1/9 | Hike | Virgil, Georgics[pdf] |
notes on Georgics | |||
1/11 |
Renaissance Pastoral |
Copy and Imitation Exercise assigned
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III | 1/16 holiday |
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1/18 |
Romanticism and Nature Beethoven Paintings by Constable and Bierstadt
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Wordsworth , selected poems[pdf] Thoreau, "Walking" abridged[pdf]
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Explore Thoreau website and links, especially, "Walden Express"
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IV | 1/23 | Thoreau at Walden |
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Study of The Environmental Imagination by Laurence Buell | |||
1/25 | Thoreau |
"Solitude," "The Ponds," "Brute Neighbors", "Spring" |
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V | 1/30 | John Muir in the Sierras |
John
Muir: The Mountains of California | Explore John Muir Exhibit website
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sample journal entries | ||
2/1 | John Muir outdoors | Geology and Climate Chapters in Field Guide |
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VI | 2/6 | Mary Austin in the Desert |
Mary Austin, The Land of Little Rain
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lecture notes | First Draft of Final Essay assigned | ||
2/8 | Mary Austin, The Land of Little Rain GWR in class |
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VII | 2/13 | Aldo Leopold | Sand County Almanac, "The Almanac," xvii-98 "The Land Ethic" 237-264 | rewrites of ecocritical essay due | |||
2/15 | Berry in Kentucky |
Wendell Berry Selected readings |
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VIII | 2/20 | Berry Map of Farm Hike; Meet at Crops Unit at 10:10 a.m. |
Agriculture and Stewardship chapters in Field Guide |
Personal essay --first draft due |
Tour of Campus Farms
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Nature, Technology and Agriculture | |
2/22 | Gary Snyder | poems by Gary Snyder | |||||
IX | 2/27 | Gary Snyder
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3/1 |
Mary Oliver
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poems by Mary Oliver | |||||
X | 3/6 | Andy Goldsworthy,Rivers and Tides |
Film and Discussion | Journal submission 2 due | |||
3/8 | Conclusion Exam Prep |
Personal essay --final draft due | |||||
Final Exam | 3/15 10:10-12:00 |
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General
This is a course about nature writing or ecoliterature, an ancient literary genre that has achieved new prominence among critics, teachers, writers and readers. The course balances humanities and science, art and nature, reading and writing, talking and walking.
Subject matter includes great works of environmental literature and their traditions, the geography and ecology of Cal Poly's ten thousand acres, and practical methods of observation and expression.
Readings
Texts include primary and secondary works of Ecoliterature as well as sections of the Cal Poly Land Website on the natural history of this place. Required texts include: 1) Cal Poly Land: A Field Guide (available only at El Corral Bookstore) 2)Thoreau Walden, 3)Mary Austin, The Land of Little Rain, 4)Aldo Leopold, Sand County Almanac (the last three available at Aida's), and several texts to be downloaded and printed from this website and kept in a binder.
Helpful suggestions for reading large documents online
Workload and Grading
Writing assignments include weblogs, including copy and imitation of a primary text, a critical analysis of nature writing and one personal ecoliterary essay.
Assignment | percent of grade | # words |
Journal [at least two entries per week, weeks II-IX, one entry in week I] | 30 | 2400 |
Copy-Imitation | 10 | 250 |
Ecocritical essay | 15 | 750 |
Personal essay: final draft | 25 | 1250 |
Final Exam | 20 | 500 |