Reading Wilderness

LIT2236.01
Course System Home Terms Fall 2018 Reading Wilderness

Course Description

Summary

For generations, the passage west and notions of wilderness have provided resonant subject matter for American writers. In the words of Wallace Stegner, 鈥渢he wilderness idea is something that has helped form our character and certainly shaped our history as a people.鈥 But if that idea is rooted in perceived notions of untouched earth, today it has more to do with managed landscapes that require constant human intervention. The course will investigate the evolution in our ideas of wilderness and how such thinking has been expressed in American literature. Reading will range from the sublime to the satirical and include work by John Muir, Henry Thoreau, Aldo Leopold, Edward Abbey, Terry Tempest Williams, Sam Shepard.

Prerequisites

None.

Please contact the faculty member :

Instructor

  • Akiko Busch

Day and Time

Academic Term

Fall 2018

Area of Study

Credits

2

Course Level

2000

Maximum Enrollment

20