Syllabus/achievement requirements

Primary texts:

  • Ted Steinberg, Down to Earth: Nature’s Role in American History, Oxford University Press, USA; 2 edition

  • Bill McKibben, ed. American Earth: Environmental Writing Since Thoreau, Library of America; First Printing edition 2008. Following excerpts:
  • Thoreau, 1-8, 26-36
  • Whitman, 59-70
  • Marsh, 71-80
  • Muir, 84-85, 104-112
  • Olmsted, 120-125
  • Pinchot, 172-180
  • Dreiser, 186-191
  • MacKaye, 209-223
  • Jeffers, 251-253
  • Guthrie, 258-259
  • Douglass, 260-264
  • Leopold, 265-294
  • Nearing, 318-322
  • Eiseley, 337-347
  • Jacobs, 359-364
  • Carson, 365-376
  • Zahniser, 392-394
  • Boulding, 399-404
  • Abbey, 413-433
  • Ehrlich, 434-437
  • Mitcell & Gaye, 489-491
  • Berry, 504-516
  • Crumb, 590-594
  • Jackson, 595-608
  • Cronon, 632-658
  • Durning, 770-780
  • Solnit, 971-976

  • Lawrence Buell, The Future of Environmental Criticism: Environmental Crisis and Literary Imagination, Wiley-Blackwell 2005. Following excerpts:1-28, 62-96

  • Robert J. Brulle, Agency, Democracy, and Nature: The U.S. Environmental Movement from a Critical Theory Perspective, The MIT Press; 1st edition, 2000.Following excerpts: 115-131, 269-282

  • John M. Meyer “Does Environmentalism Have a Future?” Dissent (2005) on Classfronter

  • Charles Olson, from Letters for Origin (10 pp.) on Classfronter

Published Oct. 12, 2010 9:49 AM - Last modified Feb. 22, 2011 5:22 PM