
In 2000, scientists informally proposed a new geological epoch called the Anthropocene. In 2009, the International Union of Geological Sciences began to consider this proposal in earnest. In 2024, it was rejected. Nonetheless, the idea of the Anthropocene persists as a reminder that human activity is now so far-reaching as to have altered the fabric of the planet. With that awareness comes an ethical dilemma: how do we prevent and redress negative impacts on the world鈥檚 ecosystems? This, in turn, presents a creative and representational challenge: how do we recognise and reimagine this responsibility?
Through a series of readings, this course explores concepts from literary studies and the wider humanities that attempt to address just these questions. We will consider, among others, solarpunk, dystopianism, apocalypticism, ecofeminism, indigenous futurism, climate justice, and multispecies justice. We will read novels such as Sarah Hall鈥檚 The Carhullan Army (published in the US as Daughters of the North), Cormac McCarthy鈥檚 The Road, John Lanchester鈥檚 The Wall, and Richard Powers鈥檚 The Overstory, and a range of short stories and poems by, among others, Helen Simpson and Kathy Jet帽il-Kijiner.
Readings
- Hall, Sarah. The Carhullan Army. Faber, 2007
- Lanchester, John. The Wall. Faber, 2019
- McCarthy, Cormac. The Road. Knopf, 2006
- Powers, Richard. The Overstory. Norton, 2018
Other readings will be provided.
Assessment
- Attendance and participation (10%)
- Exam (40%)
- Portfolio of analyses of text and theory (50%)
**Subject to change**
Prerequisites
- ENGL 200
- ENGL 290
Additional information
This course is repeatable for credit under different topic titles.