English 366 - Love, Sex, and Death in the Anthropocene, or Living Through the Age of Climate Change and Other Disasters

Love/Sex/Death in Anthropocene

Fall
2020
01
4.00
Kate Singer
M 12:45PM-02:00PM;TTH 12:45PM-01:45PM;WF 12:45PM-02:30PM
Mount Holyoke College
112045
ksinger@mtholyoke.edu
112045,112059,112192
The "Anthropocene" has been defined as the era when humans exert change on the earth's climate, but this term has become a dynamo for theories, political discussions, and art about man's anthropocentric relation to the nonhuman world. This course will read theories of the Anthropocene alongside artistic contemplations of the shifting, ethical relations among humans, animals, and other beings of the world. How are we to live, die, and reproduce ourselves in a time when we have egregiously affected the earth? How does the critique of anthropocentrism shift our understanding of sex, gender, race, and the nonhuman? Finally, how does art speak within political conversations of climate change?
Prereq: 8 credits in English or Critical Social Thought.
meets English department's seminar requirement
Permission is required for interchange registration during the add/drop period only.