And welcome to our class Chicano Ecology Blog. Looking foward to exploring the stories, environmental rhetorics, and writing about the Southwest and Latin America.
Que vaya bien! Dr. Michelle Kells
Dr. Michelle Hall Kells
University of New Mexico
Spring 2014
ENGL 440/540 Latin American Studies Program
Chicano/Latin American Ecology and Rhetoric of Environmental Justice
“As the stones from millions of years reckon, man and
machine are no more than
a shadow of a mote of dust” -Leslie Marmon Silko The Turquoise Ledge (315).
This course will explore
Chicano/Latin American Ecology and environmental writing through the critical
lens of rhetorical theory. We will examine diverse textual
representations of the environment (constructions of Greater Mexico, the US-Mexico border, and
Latin America) as exigences for social action.
Half of the course material will focus on Latin America and the other
half will focus on US-Mexico border issues. The purpose of this class is to
create a community of environmental thinkers and to cultivate opportunities for
considering our roles as citizens, activists, scholars (of place). Participation in field exercises and other learning
environments will be integral to this course.
Our reading list will include environmental texts within and beyond the
Southwest region to include Greater Mexico and Latin America ( as places and
rhetorical constructions).
We will examine, apply, and
critique contemporary rhetorical environmental texts as well as analyze case
studies in 20th century environmental writing and activism. Each
theoretical system of rhetoric advocates a model of symbolic action and maps
the exercise of influence within a socio-historical context. The study of
environmental rhetoric calls attention to the means by which activists
represent and advance their interests as individual agents and collective
entities on behalf of diverse places and their citizens. Environmental writing
is social action; creative and symbolic; dynamic; context-dependent; intrinsic
to human communication; inherent to all forms of social organization. These
conceptual framing principles (as topoi) will inform our analyses of place,
citizenship, agency, and arguments about the multiple uses of
cultural/environmental resources.
The rich literary and
rhetorical legacy of twentieth century environmental writing will be examined
through diverse textual artifacts (and genres) including public rhetoric, film,
poetry, speeches, essays, letters, creative nonfiction as well legal treatises
and policies. These different genres
tell the stories of collective struggle, achievement, and citizenship that
shape current trends in the Southwest, US-Mexico border, and Latin America in
terms of education, law, socio-economic status, government, private
organizational policies, indigenous communities and political participation
related to the environment and its use. This course will focus on literary and
political texts of the 20th century representing the ecology of
place with special emphasis on the environmental justice movements in relation
to land and water rights, climate refugees, biodiversity depletion, solastagia,
etc. (as these movements evolve into the 21st century).
NOTE: This course has been designed for undergraduate and
graduate students in Rhetorical Studies (Department of English), Latin American
Studies, Chicano Studies, Sustainability Studies, Political Science, and
Sociology. We will focus on the range of arguments (across genres and discourse
communities in public/popular cultures) about the environment and ecological
ethics land/earth literacies) throughout the 20th century—applying a pragmatic
approach to modern rhetorical theory as a critical lens. Final course projects will be adapted to the
specific needs, interests, and genre-practices of the students in my course
with respect to their different disciplines and scholarly goals.
Chicano
Ecology Blog:
Students will post segments of our weekly Reader
Response Reflection Journals to our class blog at:
ü Paul Farmer. Pathologies
of Power: Health, Human Rights, and the New War on the Poor.
ü M. Jimmie Killingsworth and Jacqueline S. Palmer. Eco Speak: Rhetoric and Environmental
Politics in America.
ü Joan Martinez-Alier. The Environmentalism of the Poor: A Study of Ecological Conflicts and
Valuation.
ü Devon G. Peña. Chicano
Culture, Ecology, Politics.
ü Frederick B. Pike. The
United States and Latin America: Myths and Stereotypes of Civilization and
Nature.
ü Thomas A. Skidmore and Peter H. Smith. Modern Latin America.
ü Salt of the
Earth.
ü Milagro
Beanfield Wars.
ü When the
Mountains Tremble: Rigoberta Menchú
Course readings, assignments,
films, field exercises, and class discussions are designed to promote the
following learning outcomes:
·
Engage the
analytical resources of rhetorical studies to current environmental issues;
·
Interrogate
questions related to environmental ethics, public health, as well as bio-diversity
and natural resource depletion;
·
Examine
structural systems of exploitation impacting vulnerable communities and diverse
environmental contexts in the U.S. Southwest and Latin America;
·
Analyze the
rhetorical representation of the complex economic and political relationships
conditioning environmental justice and human rights;
·
Apply and
integrate concepts of rhetorical studies to environmental texts;
·
Guide and
participate in class discussions of course readings;
·
Participate in
field exercises and public rhetoric events;
·
Critically
analyze environmental rhetorics across academic and public cultures;
·
Conduct
observations and generate field notes about diverse environmental sites
(natural and constructed spaces);
·
Connect learning to the environmental rhetorics of
everyday life;
·
Develop an
intellectual project through course assignments around the one of the major
themes of environmental rhetoric;
·
Explore regional
environmental resources and build awareness of local communities;
·
Cultivate
alliances with peers and work collaboratively toward common goals.