Critical Social Inquiry 0240 - Indigenous Environmental Activ

Fall
2018
1
4.00
Ashley Smith
02:30PM-03:50PM M;02:30PM-03:50PM W
Hampshire College
327397
Franklin Patterson Hall 102;Franklin Patterson Hall 102
aesCSI@hampshire.edu
From battles against oil pipelines and fracking on indigenous lands, to the fight for clean fish and traditional sustenance fishing rights, to the struggle for indigenous sovereignty, Indigenous peoples around the globe are engaging in social and environmental activism. In this course we will consider how the histories of dispossession and settler colonialism inform indigenous approaches to environmental justice. We will learn about indigenous philosophies of the environment by examining indigenous creation stories and Traditional Ecological Knowledge (TEK). We will also engage the politics of indigenous environmental activism, which is haunted by the specter of the "ecologically noble Indian." This image of the ultimate environmental savior is a caricature of indigenous peoples that, while useful in gaining support from non-Indian allies for indigenous causes, can also undermine indigenous sovereignty. Students will be evaluated on classroom participation, short assignments, a current events project, and a final project and presentation.
Multiple Cultural Perspectives Students are expected to spend 6-8 hours weekly on work and preparation outside of class time. Prerequisite: Preferred experience in NAS or Environmental Studies
Multiple required components--lab and/or discussion section. To register, submit requests for all components simultaneously.
This course has unspecified prerequisite(s) - please see the instructor.
Permission is required for interchange registration during the add/drop period only.