Spring 2025 English BC3321 section 001

Changing Climate, Changing World

Changing Climate and Worl

Call Number 00630
Day & Time
Location
MW 5:40pm-6:55pm
To be announced
Points 4
Grading Mode Standard
Approvals Required None
Instructor Linn C Mehta
Type LECTURE
Course Description

An interdisciplinary course focused on environmental humanities and based in the English department, “Changing Climate, Changing World” will examine the representation of nature across time and its implications for global warming and biodiversity from multiple perspectives, emphasizing issues of climate change and environmental justice. The course will provide a conceptual framework for reading and critiquing the representation of nature in the context of historical, economic, social, cultural, scientific and political change.


The course design asks students to address climate change in the context of the industrial revolution before discussing environmental issues in a pre-industrial and finally a post-industrial context. We will begin in media res by addressing issues of industrialization and colonialism in the mid-18th and 19th century before considering indigenous, medieval, and renaissance representations of nature. In the second half of the course, we return to examine contemporary issues from the early 20th century to the present.


The course will meet twice weekly in Spring 2025. One of these meetings will include a lecture with a guest faculty member from Barnard and Columbia, or occasionally with other experts, artists, and activists from New York and beyond, followed by questions from the audience on the lecture. The second meeting will emphasize student discussion of the lecture and associated readings, with the purpose of integrating each lecture into the total course framework. Since all the participating faculty are teaching full time, we will aim to schedule lectures in the late afternoon or evening to minimize conflicts. We would also like to open some of the lectures to the public, either virtually or in person, so that their impact could be felt beyond the class itself.

Web Site Vergil
Department English @Barnard
Enrollment 29 students (60 max) as of 12:06PM Tuesday, December 3, 2024
Subject English
Number BC3321
Section 001
Division Barnard College
Section key 20251ENGL3321X001