ENGL4835: Environmental Literature (69175)

Iyengar, Sujata

TR 9:35 AM

Park Hall 0259


ENGL 4835/4390: Environmental Literature/Topics in Renaissance Literature

 

Instructor: Dr. Sujata Iyengar, iyengar@uga.edu

 

Location: Park Hall 259, gardens, and rivers

 

Time: Tuesdays and Thursdays,

9.35am-10.50am

 

A purple flower in a pond

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Immerse yourself in the natural world through walks around campus; readings about the natural world from pre-industrial times to the present; reflective journaling about your experiences with natural or wild spaces; and a celebration in the Founders' Garden.

 

Reading from Camille Dungy’s poetry anthology Black Nature, Robin Kimmerer’s nonfiction text Braiding Sweetgrass and other twenty-first-century texts as well as from early modern poems and essays about nature, we will journal about our readings and experiences; observe and cherish our green spaces on campus; and discuss how and whether present-day humans can learn from pre-industrial societies’ very different relationship with the natural world.

 

This course can be used to fulfil either the English major's requirement in literature before pre-1800 (Group 1) or the requirement in language, criticism, and culture (Group 4). We would be willing to accommodate interested students who might not have the prerequisites.

 

A white flower with green leaves

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