Course - Topics in Environmental Humanities - EH8000
EH8000 - Topics in Environmental Humanities
About
Lessons are not given in the academic year 2024/2025
Course content
Environmental storytelling and narrative
This course will explore the centrality of storytelling and diverse narrative practices in the environmental humanities, not only as tools of communication that promote understanding of complex environmental processes and capture ecological imagination, but also as catalysts to emotion and pathways to civic engagement. Students will examine how several central areas of inquiry within EH research theorize and engage with narration, both broadly across the international field as well as more locally in the Nordic region (including collaborations with the cultural institutions in Trondheim).
The course will investigate the articulation across narrative media forms of environmental humanities research topics that may include resource extraction, petrocultures, blue humanities, haunting, solastalgia, mourning, irony, and affect. In addition to theoretical and thematic engagement with environmental storytelling, this course will have a practical hands-on component and a special focus on public dissemination and cooperation with community partners. The students will learn how to collaboratively develop an outward-facing public engagement output.
The course is held as part of the Norwegian Researcher School in Environmental Humanities (NoRS-EH).
Learning outcome
Skills:
Students who finish the course will have the following skills:
- ability to perform close analysis of film, television, literary, and intermedial texts
- ability to plan and execute public engagement efforts
- ability to engage in critical reflection on public environmental humanities
Knowledge:
Students who finish the course will have greater knowledge of:
- critical approaches to narrative and storytelling in the context of environmental humanities research - critical paradigms within environmental humanities
- the use of intermedial storytelling in public engagement and dissemination
Learning methods and activities
- 35 hours of participation in lectures, workshops, seminars, field trips, and group activities during the 5 days - Self-studies / reading: 300 pages syllabus - One five-minute presentation during the course - Compulsory assignment
Compulsory assignments
- Participation in all five days
- Assignment and presentation
- Final assignment (Creative and/or multimedia production (podcast, video, etc)
Required previous knowledge
Requires admission to a PhD programme and valid membership in NoRS-EH.
Specific conditions: Exam registration requires that class registration is approved in the same semester.
Course materials
Course materials will be provided before the course start.
No
Version: 1
Credits:
5.0 SP
Study level: Doctoral degree level
No
Language of instruction: English
Location: Trondheim
- Film Studies
- Comparative Literature
- Media Studies and Communication
- Media Studies
Department with academic responsibility
Faculty of Humanities
Examination
- * The location (room) for a written examination is published 3 days before examination date. If more than one room is listed, you will find your room at Studentweb.
For more information regarding registration for examination and examination procedures, see "Innsida - Exams"