What is "place"? What is the environmental imagination?
In this course we will explore the environment, environmental writing, and environmental movements--however it will not be "an environmentalist course" as much as a class which engages the environmental imagination. We will examine not only the American wilderness but man-made considerations of the urban world and broader questions of community and identity, not limited to the natural environment.
To begin to examine these considerations, I want to look at five different musicians, all inspired by their environment, in very different ways:
Joni Mitchell: Big Yellow Taxi
(Traditional environmentalism, what we think of when we imagine activism and the environment)
Lyrics: http://www.songmeanings.net/songs/view/72020/
Lynyrd Skynyrd: Sweet Home Alabama
("Hometown" as environment, environmental writing as defence of one's "place")
Lyrics: http://www.songmeanings.net/songs/view/43488/
The Weakerthans: One Great City
(Nostalgic dislike of home, troubled relationship with place)
Lyrics: http://www.songmeanings.net/songs/view/43488/
Radiohead: Fake Plastic Trees
Radiohead - Fake Plastic Trees
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("Unplaces", a lack of connection to place)
Lyrics: http://www.songmeanings.net/songs/view/573/
Bruce Springsteen: The River
(Place as part of the larger human narrative, a backdrop for issues of class and human relationships)
Lyrics: http://www.songmeanings.net/songs/view/3458764513820552778/
Homework: "Everything Is a Human Being,” by Alice Walker, p. 659
from Leaves of Grass, “This Compost,” by Walt Whitman, pp. 62-63, and "Manhood for Amateurs: The Wilderness of Childhood" by Michael Chabon (http://www.nybooks.com/articles/archives/2009/jul/16/manhood-for-amateurs-the-wilderness-of-childhood/) (Journal on one)
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