ENGL 3560

ENGL 3560

Course information provided by the Courses of Study 2024-2025.

The Western nation-state has failed to solve the two most pressing, indeed catastrophic, global problems: poverty and climate change. This failure is due to the inability of national policy to imagine a world beyond a boundary drawn by the formative capitalist ideas of property, production, and profit. The course will begin by discussing the historical origin and continuing force of these ideas while raising questions about their limits. Then it will look at a range of alternative ideas about how the world should work if we want to keep it socially, economically, and ecologically in balance. The alternatives we will query come from a range of Indigenous writers of fiction, poetry, and theory, who locate themselves in Native American (north and south), Aboriginal, and Maori communities.

When Offered Spring.

Distribution Category (SCD-AS) (D-AG, LA-AG)
Course Attribute (CU-SBY)
Satisfies Requirement This course counts toward the Literatures of the Americas and post-1800 requirements for English majors.

Outcomes
  • Explain Indigenous theory and practice in dealing with social, economic, and environmental issues.
  • Contrast Indigenous theory and practice with Western approaches to these issues at a time of gross income inequality and environmental collapse worldwide.
  • Think critically about the most effective ways to deal with these global issues after having considered both approaches to these issues.

View Enrollment Information

Syllabi: none
  •   Regular Academic Session.  Combined with: AIIS 3560AMST 3562

  • 3 Credits Stdnt Opt

  •  9272 ENGL 3560   SEM 101

  • Instruction Mode: In Person