Estudios Norteamericanos (Conjunto con UAH)
Master's Programme. Academic Year 2024/2025.
HERENCIA NATURAL ESTADOUNIDENSE Y ECOLOGÍA:HISTORIA, POLÍTICA, CIENCIA, PENSAMIENTO Y CULTURA - 608562
Curso Académico 2024-25
Datos Generales
- Plan de estudios: 065A - MÁSTER UNIVERSITARIO EN ESTUDIOS NORTEAMERICANOS (2016-17)
- Carácter: OPTATIVA
- ECTS: 6.0
SINOPSIS
COMPETENCIAS
Generales
1. Understanding and getting familiarized with some of the basic US methodologies for knowledge acquisition: Case studies and observation.
2. Carrying out bibliographic and other sources research and becoming acquainted with creative research methodologies.
3. Reading, writing and speaking within the different disciplines that contribute to natural heritage, using appropriate range of vocabulary and academic conventions; practice oral presentations.
4. Analyzing and understanding complex problems from a multidisciplinary point of view, including a respect for alternative positions.
5. Evaluating the additional value embedded in collaborative team-work with their own colleagues.
2. Carrying out bibliographic and other sources research and becoming acquainted with creative research methodologies.
3. Reading, writing and speaking within the different disciplines that contribute to natural heritage, using appropriate range of vocabulary and academic conventions; practice oral presentations.
4. Analyzing and understanding complex problems from a multidisciplinary point of view, including a respect for alternative positions.
5. Evaluating the additional value embedded in collaborative team-work with their own colleagues.
Específicas
1. Understanding the different role and contribution that hard and life sciences, technologies, social sciences, as well as the humanities and the arts have as an element of environmental policy design and implementation as well as in the conformation of cultural heritage.
2. Understanding how the philosophical, ethical, social and literary movements related to environmental concerns and public awareness influence both policy decisions and cultural attitudes with regards to nature and the environment.
3. Becoming acquainted with the subtle differences that living and working in different regions of the US imply vs. visions of "all Americans" stereotypes.
4. The course also offers an opportunity to publish book reviews or notes/commentaries in high ranked journals for the student who may opt for more in-depth additional work, as a first step in their academic or professional careers.
2. Understanding how the philosophical, ethical, social and literary movements related to environmental concerns and public awareness influence both policy decisions and cultural attitudes with regards to nature and the environment.
3. Becoming acquainted with the subtle differences that living and working in different regions of the US imply vs. visions of "all Americans" stereotypes.
4. The course also offers an opportunity to publish book reviews or notes/commentaries in high ranked journals for the student who may opt for more in-depth additional work, as a first step in their academic or professional careers.
ACTIVIDADES DOCENTES
Clases prácticas
12 hours lectures; 30 participative seminars
3 hours tutorials for projects.
3 hours tutorials for projects.
Otras actividades
Student work: Team work in multidisciplinary settings, reading texts, nature writing journal, film viewing, research and writing of paper.
TOTAL
150 horas
Presenciales
2
No presenciales
4
Semestre
2
Breve descriptor:
This course focuses on environmental history and actual cases and the second centered on cultural attitudes and representations. It covers three different issue-areas.
The first area begins with a more classic methodology, introducing the students to US Environmental History, i.e., what has been the role of the territory (space) and nature from its geological origins and its existing megafauna when the first Americans arrived circa 14.000 years ago until today. It is subdivided in five sections each of them around a case study of the series of the US Center for the Humanities and of the institute itself (Friends of Thoreau Program): a) Native American cultures and their link to nature science and religion, and their original and current distribution the U.S. territory; b) the different ways in which the main European colonial cultures envisioned North American nature (Spanish, French and English, with additional excursus on other cultures such a Scottish/Welsh, Dutch, and the several pacifist religious groups, mainly in PA); c) the cycles in U.S. history on the perception of what space meant from the birth of the US until the 1870s and the use the citizens/settlers made of it (e.g. the meaning in the American collective psyche of the Lewis &Clark, mountain men, and Prince William & Bodmer expeditions west of the Mississippi, while the use of the Eastern territories continued: the cotton belt, Appalachians, and distribution of the different landscape and sense of place cultures in the East the "paradise" approach of American vs. European geology and biology scientists, the Erie Canal, and the impact of the Civil War on American landscapes; homesteading of the west, and gold-rushes, as an addition to the "Manifest Destiny" policies of the successive US federal administrations, plus its singularities in the different areas: Mormon Utah, Great Plains, Great Basin, the two Plateaus, the South West desserts and California; d) the shock of the symbolic species extinctions and of the paradise in the 1870s (Great Auk, passenger pigeons, buffalo..) and the consolidation of the environmental culture and reinvention of nature in Western thought (the New England traditionalists -Emerson, Thoreau-, National Parks as "An American Idea", the "Forever Wild" clause for the Adirondacks in the NY State Constitution, and its main historical figures: : Audobon, Marsh, Ebenezer Simmons; the new vision for the west of Wesley Powell, Rooselvelt, Aldo Leopold, John Muir..; e) the cycles of balance and counterbalance through the economic raise of the U.S. to the firsrt economy of the world until the reaction of the so-called "environmental decade" -1970-1980- which set the current institutional framework of environmental policies for the rest of the world, and its aftermath).
The second area of knowledge that is covered, shorter in time and also following mainly traditional methods of pre-reading, lectures and discussions, focuses on the acquisition knowledge/skills to identify the basic features of the different North American land and marine ecoregions, based on the relatively recent work of the North American Commission on Environmental Cooperation. From the identification of landscapes and animals unique to North America, to the different "sense of place" cultures that they entail within the framework of U.S. national identity.
The third area focuses on more specific disciplines and how they interact within the US and as part of US international policies: environmental ethics, nature literature (non-fiction and fiction), U.S. approach to environmental law and policy, including their interaction with the third sector (land stewardship, environmental and nature protection powerful NGOs - The Nature Conservancy, Sierra Club, National Wildlife Federation, NRDC...) and other more or less institutionalized interactions: environmental justice, groundswell activism, ecofeminism, ecocriticism..., and their respective role in American nature and environmental thought as tangible and intangible cultural heritage
While the first and second areas use as prevalent methodology the more classic lecture and additional selective pre-readings of texts, or other audiovisual materials -i.e. mostly documentaries- , they also slowly introduce students into a typical American methodology: Case Studies. They are clustered around topics or issue areas, so that students get used to creatively becoming immersed in a minimum of in-depth research in each of the sections: environmental history and US bioregions and biodiversity.
The third area is almost 100% based mainly -but not only- on the Case Studies Series that are listed later in the bibliography and they can be downloaded from:
https://www.institutofranklin.net/en/research/united-states-area/environment/friends-thoreau/
or from
https://nationalhumanitiescenter.org/tserve/nattrans/nattrans.htm
The purpose if this strategy is to ensure that students are fully familiarized with the empirical method of learning implicit in the use of case studies, enabling them to identify issues, topics, questions ... in need of farther research, and how to identify and refine its goals, its planning alternatives and the choice of the most adequate methodologies.
Once their exposure to the first two areas is completed, with the adequate weight in each of them to exposure of case studies analysis, and the students are used and trained on the case study approach, they proceed, once the course gets into the third area, with more freedom on their own choices of topics for research, always supervised so that they receive help, when requested, when they intuitively perceive that they might be following paths leading to distraction or divergence from the original goals. The main focus of this part lies on ensuring they learn how to move from curiosity and anecdotal knowledge to serious high quality research.
If the authorities establish confinement should continue due to COVID-19, classes will be held online until said confinement is no longer applied.
Requisitos
Los generales de admisión al máster
Contenido
Understanding the program and methodologies. Intro to US environmental history. First Americans and their legacy in Native Americans. Spanish, French and British colonialism and their view of the American paradise.
US environmental history. From the Lewis & Clark expedition to the end of the 19th century. Thoreau, Leopold, Muir, US National Parks
US environmental History. From the turn of the 20th Century to current environmentalism.
Introduction to research on US nature conservation and environmentalism: Case Study on US Environmental History: Whaling in New England during the 19th century
North American bioregions: U.S. Green Infrastructure. Ecological Terrestrial Regions of North America: Towards a Common Perspective & Marine Ecoregions of North America.
Introduction to research on US nature conservation and environmentalism: Case Study on US bioregions: The Meaning of Salmon in the North West: A Historical, Scientific, and Sociological Case Study. "Landscape Protection in Vermont" "The Sea Otter Recovery project"
Case Studies on environmental institutions & policy: Choice of Case studies: Pollution in the Everglades National Park, Climate Change and Sustainable Development Goals in the U.S., Community Supported Agriculture, Boston Harbor Project, Oil spill prevention in California.
Case Studies on environmental institutions & policy (Continued): Choice of Case studies: Pollution in the Everglades National Park, Climate Change and Sustainable Development Goals in the U.S., Community Supported Agriculture, Boston Harbor Project, Oil spill prevention in California. Land Cases (Nature Transformed).
Case studies on Native Americans and Nature: Native Americans and Natural Resources: the Black Mesa controversy; "In light of Reverence" Cases. Native Americans and the Land (Nature Transformed)
Ecocriticism & Nature Writing: Choice: Case study on Adirondack Writing and the Wilderness Aesthetic; Case study on the Mexican Wolf; Case Study on the Red Wolf, Case Study on the California Condor; Case Study on the Puerto Rican Parrot; Case Study on the Whooping Crane; Fishermen Tales (Greenlaw); Wilderness and American Identity (Nature Transformed)
Case Studies on environmental justice: Case study: Hispanic Illegal Immigrants in Elkhorn Slough; The NIMBY effect and the middle class reaction to environmental infrastructures: Case study on: Cape Cod Offshore Wind Park; Brownfields in African American urban environments. Environmental Justice (Nature Transformed)
Environmental Ethics: Case studies: the Vivisection controversy in the U.S.; Introduction to the Animal Rights Movement in the U.S.
Contemporary role of arts in environmental awareness: Case Study on painting: contribution of contemporary Haida and Ledger painting to Native American "Horse Culture" and environmental culture; Case Study on Film contributions: choice between Civil Action and Erin Brockovich.
Presentation and discussion of research results by the students.
Evaluación
Meaningful class participation in discussions (including teamwork): 40%
Oral presentations of research topics: 40%
Additional short written assignments (preps for presentations): 20%
Oral presentations of research topics: 40%
Additional short written assignments (preps for presentations): 20%
Bibliografía
First Issue -area:
Enrique Alonso García & Ana Recarte Vicente-Arche, Cap 1.- Historia ambiental de los Estados Unidos: de los orígenes al final de la guerra civil; cap. 2.- Historia ambiental de los Estados Unidos (ii) de finales del siglo XIX a la actualidad.
Ted Steinberg, Down to Earth: Nature's Role in American History (Oxford University Press, 2002)
Peirce Lewis. "America¿s Natural Landscapes". Chapter 1 of Luther S. Luedtke (ed) Making America: The Society and Culture of the United States (The University of north Carlina Press 1992). pgs. 41-67.
Excerpts from classic texts: Carolyn Merchant (ed.): Major Problems in American Environmental History: Documents and Essays. Houghton Mifflin Co. 2d. ed. 2005.
Second Issue -area:
Ecoregions of North America, Commission on Environmental Cooperation, http://www.fs.fed.us/rm/ecoregions/products/map-ecoregions-north-america/
Marine Ecoregions of North America, Commission on Environmental Cooperation, http://www2.cec.org/nampan/ecoregions
US Green Infrastructire. ESRI
https://www.esri.com/en-us/industries/green-infrastructure/overview
Third Issue -area:
Case Studies. See http://www.institutofranklin.net/en/research/united-states-area/environment/friends-thoreau/ (see the list below)
Additional Case Studies (I): Case studies of the series "Nature Transformed: The Environment in American History" of the National Humanities Center:
https://nationalhumanitiescenter.org/tserve/nattrans/nattrans.htm (see list below)
Additional Case Studies (II): extracted from Enrique Alonso Garcia. Introduction to International Environmental Law: Handbook with Cases and Materials for American Lawyers W&M-URJC Pub. 3d Ed 2012.
Enrique Alonso García & Ana Recarte Vicente-Arche, Cap 1.- Historia ambiental de los Estados Unidos: de los orígenes al final de la guerra civil; cap. 2.- Historia ambiental de los Estados Unidos (ii) de finales del siglo XIX a la actualidad.
Ted Steinberg, Down to Earth: Nature's Role in American History (Oxford University Press, 2002)
Peirce Lewis. "America¿s Natural Landscapes". Chapter 1 of Luther S. Luedtke (ed) Making America: The Society and Culture of the United States (The University of north Carlina Press 1992). pgs. 41-67.
Excerpts from classic texts: Carolyn Merchant (ed.): Major Problems in American Environmental History: Documents and Essays. Houghton Mifflin Co. 2d. ed. 2005.
Second Issue -area:
Ecoregions of North America, Commission on Environmental Cooperation, http://www.fs.fed.us/rm/ecoregions/products/map-ecoregions-north-america/
Marine Ecoregions of North America, Commission on Environmental Cooperation, http://www2.cec.org/nampan/ecoregions
US Green Infrastructire. ESRI
https://www.esri.com/en-us/industries/green-infrastructure/overview
Third Issue -area:
Case Studies. See http://www.institutofranklin.net/en/research/united-states-area/environment/friends-thoreau/ (see the list below)
Additional Case Studies (I): Case studies of the series "Nature Transformed: The Environment in American History" of the National Humanities Center:
https://nationalhumanitiescenter.org/tserve/nattrans/nattrans.htm (see list below)
Additional Case Studies (II): extracted from Enrique Alonso Garcia. Introduction to International Environmental Law: Handbook with Cases and Materials for American Lawyers W&M-URJC Pub. 3d Ed 2012.
Otra información relevante
The information in this sheet does not replace the course syllabus, which is the document where activities, material, readings and thematic content will be specified.
During the first week of class, the syllabus will be handed out in the classroom and will also be available on the virtual campus of the course.
During the first week of class, the syllabus will be handed out in the classroom and will also be available on the virtual campus of the course.
Estructura
Módulos | Materias |
---|---|
No existen datos de módulos o materias para esta asignatura. |
Grupos
Clases teóricas y/o prácticas | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Grupo | Periodos | Horarios | Aula | Profesor |
Grupo T | 27/01/2025 - 09/05/2025 | MIÉRCOLES 18:00 - 21:00 | - |