ENVR 326 - Environmental History

Institution:
Willamette University
Subject:
Description:
This course will give students a general introduction to environmental history, using a wide range of sources including history textbooks, popular writing about nature and the environment, nature documentaries, and the landscape. The course will challenge students to think critically about the study of history, how history articulates ongoing human efforts to understand and control nature, and how history investigates current debates about the environment. Topics include: deforestation and the development of the agrarian landscape in Western Europe; European colonization and the effect of European contact on native populations in North America; industrialization and the use and development of natural resources; the definitions, planning, and management of public spaces such as national parks, game lands and zoos; establishment of environmental standards; the emergence of conservation ecology; "green" politics and ecofeminism. Mode of Inquiry: Thinking Historically; Environmental Cluster Prerequisite: Closed to freshmen Offering: Spring Instructor: Bourque
Credits:
1.00
Credit Hours:
Prerequisites:
Corequisites:
Exclusions:
Level:
Instructional Type:
Lecture
Notes:
Additional Information:
Historical Version(s):
Institution Website:
Phone Number:
(503) 370-6300
Regional Accreditation:
Northwest Commission on Colleges and Universities
Calendar System:
Semester

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