This course will explore the representations of environmental crises across a range of periods, genres, and geographies. Drawing on critical frameworks from the environmental humanities, postcolonial ecocriticism and ecopoetics, we will explore the capacity of different literary forms, such as poetry, speculative fiction, cli-fi, and creative non-fiction, to represent, explore and address climate change and the ‘slow violence’ of the environmental crisis.
You will compare texts by writers of different ethnicities from multiple regions. Reading these texts, we will concentrate on certain key questions, such as:
- What capacity do literary texts have to imagine alternative futures or relations to nature?
- How might narratives help provide a framework for how we think about real-world environmental issues?
- How does literature represent and critique relationships between species, races, classes, and genders with the climate crises and their consequences?
- In what way are social and environmental justice intertwined
This course is part of the Oxford University Summer School for Adults (OUSSA) programme.