English 380--ECOLIT: Reading and Writing the Landscape


Section 01: TR 4:10-6:00 PM in 38-218
Instructor: Steven Marx
phone: 756-2411
smarx@calpoly.edu
http://cla.calpoly.edu/~smarx
Office: 47-25E (Faculty Office Building)
Office hours: T: 11:10-12:00noon; MW 8:10-9:00 AM
 

Spring 2003 Schedule

Week Date Topic Primary Texts
[required and due; please print and bring to class]

Secondary Texts and other Resources
[optional]

Writing
[date due]
Landscape Natural History Topics 
I 4/1

The Ancient Pastoral Tradition

Beatles,
Canned Heat

Bible, Genesis 1
Song of Songs
Virgil, Eclogue 1
Ovid, The golden Age

Cal Poly Land: A Field Guide, preface, introduction, Places, The Arts chapters

 

Instructor's Nature writing

Introduction to Ecocriticism

Association for the Study of Literature and the Environment[ASLE]

See Rivers and Tides: Andy Goldsworthy Working with Time, now at the Palm Theatre in SLO

Get class email

Start Journal

Ecolit Journal 2001

OED--find any word

  Cal Poly Land

  4/3

Renaissance Pastoral

Come Away
It was a lover and his lass

Marlowe, "The Passionate Shepherd",
Ralegh, "The Nymph's Reply"
Shakespeare, Duke Senior's speech
John Milton, The Creation, from Paradise Lost 7. 210-534
Andrew Marvell, "The Garden"

 

 

"The Shepherd's Philosophy"

Youth Against Age

 

Class meets at Gate of Poly Canyon, walks to hillside viewpoint.

Optional campout

Morning April 4 '03

 

Poly Canyon

 

 

II 4/8

Romanticism and Nature 

Beethoven
Schubert, Die Schoene Muellerin

Paintings by Constable and Bierstadt

lecture notes

Wordsworth , selected poems
"April," from John Clare, The Shepherd's Calender
Emerson: Nature

 

Copy and Imitation Exercise assigned [due April 17]

Sign up for journal conference in class [schedule]

   
  4/10  

Read "Vegetation" chapter in Cal Poly Land:A Field Guide

 

  Journal 1 conferences begin

Horse Canyon

meet at OH unit at 4:00 p.m. [item 48 on this map]

picture gallery

Plant Communities

III 4/15 Walking in Spring

Susan Fenimore Cooper:Rural Hours "Spring"

Thoreau, "Walking"
[in three parts]

highlighted

highlighted version

Reading Notes

Ecocrit Paper Topics

 

   
  4/17  

Continue with Thoreau's "Walking"

Archaeology and Wildlife Chapters, including "Birds," in Field Guide

Laurence Buell, The Environmental Imagination, summarized

Birds found near Cal Poly Campus

Copy and Imitation Exercise due

A Saunter to destination unknown.

Meet at Gate to Poly Canyon at 4:00p.m.

picture gallery

 

Wildlife and Archaeology
IV 4/22 Thoreau at Walden

Thoreau: Walden
read "Sounds,"
"Solitude,"
"The Ponds," "Brute Neighbors", "Spring"

Explore Thoreau website and links, especially, "Walden Express"

reading notes

     
  4/24   History chapter in Field Guide   Class Journal entries and pictures

Sounds and sights in the Campus Barn

Flora and Fauna
V 4/29 Muir in the Sierras

John Muir: The Mountains of California
Chapter 1,
Chapter 2
Chapter 10

Explore John Muir Exhibit website      
  5/1   Geology and Climate Chapters in Field Guide  

Ecocritical Essay due

Hike to Rockslide Ridge. Leave from Arboretum entrance at 4:10 sharp

picture gallery

Optional campout 5

Geology

VI 5/6

Mary Austin in the Desert

Mary Austin, The Land of Little Rain

 

 

lecture notes First Draft of Final Essay assignment[due 5/15]    
  5/8   Read Soils and Water and Technology chapters of Cal Poly Land: A Field Guide    

Stenner Canyon Hike--meet at Serrano Ranch barn at end of Stenner Creek Road--"BARN" on Great Loop Map, p. 226 of Field Guide

picture gallery

Bettina's pictures

 

 

History
Soils and Water

VII 5/13 Troutman in San Luis Obispo

Baxter Troutman, The Spirit of the Valley pp 1-57

GWR in class

  Journal collection for grading (2)    
  5/15

hike map

 

poems by Mary Oliver  

Personal essay --first draft

First Draft of Final Essay due

Cheda Ranch Hike; carpool to Trestle on Stenner Road

 

Optional campout 7

 

VIII 5/20 Berry in Kentucky

Wendell Berry Selected readings

Natural Capitalism chapter 10 [download and print]

  Schedule for conference #2    
  5/22 Map of Farm Hike; Meet at Crops Unit at 4:00 p.m. Agriculture and Stewardship chapters in Field Guide    

Tour of Campus Farms

 

Nature, Technology and Agriculture
IX 5/27

Troutman in San Luis Obispo

Meet in classroom

Baxter Troutman, The Spirit of the Valley pp 59-124 Outline of book      
  5/29

Pennington Canyon hike

how to get there

Recreation chapter in Field Guide  

Pennington canyon

picture gallery

Oak woodland
X 6/3

Conclusion
Exam Prep Meet at Marx's house--265 Albert [how to get there]

    Journal submission 3    
  6/5 class cancelled because of Conference presentation     Personal essay --final draft--leave in English Department, 47-32    
Final Exam  6/12 7:10-9:00 p.m.  

Ecolit Journal--the class anthology [pdf file]

Sample "A" essays on final exam

       

This is a course about nature writing or ecoliterature, an ancient literary genre that has achieved new prominence among critics, teachers, writers and readers. The course balances humanities and science, art and nature, reading and writing, talking and walking.

Subject matter includes great works of environmental literature and their traditions, the geography and ecology of Cal Poly's ten thousand acres, and practical methods of observation and expression.

Texts include primary and secondary works of Ecoliterature as well as sections of the Cal Poly Land Website on the natural history of this place. You are required to purchase two books available at El Corral Bookstore: Cal Poly Land: A Field Guide and The Spirit of the Valley, by Cal Poly alumna, Baxter Troutman, a book written as an M. A. thesis in Biological Sciences.

Writing assignments include journals, copyings and imitations of primary texts, a critical analysis of nature writing and two personal ecoliterary essays, one primarily descriptive and explanatory, the other more reflective and persuasive.

The class meets on Tuesday and Thursday late afternoons during Spring Quarter. The Tuesday class takes place indoors, the Thursday class includes a walk to an appropriate site on Cal Poly Land.

The Tuesday class includes lectures about the major writers studied and their historical and cultural context, including relevant literary and scientific traditions of nature writing. It also includes analysis of the artistry that heightens enjoyment of their work and provides models for student work. Each Tuesday class will contain discussion of ethical, social, and scientific controversies touched upon in the assigned readings.

The Thursday class involves excursions by foot or van to the kinds of landscapes on the Cal Poly campus represented and responded to in the literary texts. These include grassland, creeks and ponds, and mountaintops. Like the readings, each week's excursion emphasizes a distinct topic in natural history like climate, geology, or archaeology, and a distinct ecological system or community like chapparel, marsh or oak woodland. Information about these specific places will be provided by the appropriate section of Cal Poly Land: A Field Guide and the Cal Poly Land website. In addition to talks at stopping points by the instructor and guest lecturers, students will divide into small groups and share their "readings" of landscape features with one another.

 

Assignment percent of grade # words
Journal 1 0 --
Copy and Imitation Exercise 10 500
Ecocritical essay 15 750
Journal 2 10 --
Personal essay: first draft 0 750
Personal essay: final draft 30 1250
Journal 3 15  
Final Exam    
Objective 
10  
Essay
10 500

 

Graduate Writing Requirement (GWR)

Rules

  • Late papers are penalized one full grade for each class session's delay unless a postponement is granted by the instructor in advance.
  • Attendance is not optional. Each unexcused absence beyond two lowers the grade by one half letter; seven or more unexcused absences result in no credit. Three unexcused latenesses count for one absence. Certified medical absences or job interviews are not counted in these totals and are the only reason for makeups .
  • Deliberate plagiarism or other forms of cheating result in a failing grade and referral to the dean. Students are responsible for understanding the definition of plagiarism. Please consult the instructor if this linked page on the subject doesn't make it clear to you.