Courses:

Technology and Nature in American History >> Content Detail



Syllabus



Syllabus


Amazon logo When you click the Amazon logo to the left of any citation and purchase the book (or other media) from Amazon.com, MIT OpenCourseWare will receive up to 10% of this purchase and any other purchases you make during that visit. This will not increase the cost of your purchase. Links provided are to the US Amazon site, but you can also support OCW through Amazon sites in other regions. Learn more.



Course Description


The central question of this course is how technological and natural forces have interacted in the making of modern America. Beginning in colonial America and ending in the twenty-first century, we will consider how the visual and material world of "nature" has been reshaped by industrial practices, ideologies, and institutions, with a particular emphasis on the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Through our lectures and readings we will visit a variety of landscapes—from small farms to suburbs, from Walden Pond to Yosemite National Park—in an effort to uncover not only the ways that technologies have shaped the landscapes around us, but also the ways that the natural world has resisted and redirected technological change. Topics include land-use patterns; the changing shape of cities and farms; the redesign of water systems; the construction of roads, dams, bridges, irrigation systems; the creation of national parks; ideas about wilderness; aesthetic responses to industrialization; and the role of nature in a "technological world."



General Course Requirements


Students are expected to attend all sessions and to be active participants in class discussion. More than two (2) unexcused absences will have an adverse effect on your grade. As this is a Communication-Intensive (CI) course, students will be assessed on both oral and written work: students will be required to lead class discussion at least once during the semester, to participate actively in each class discussion, to write frequent 1-2 page informal reading response papers, to write three (3) formal papers of increasing length, and to submit a draft and revision of the final research paper.



Required Reading and Writing


The following books are required for the course. Additional articles and book excerpts will also be assigned and distributed.

Amazon logo Basso, Keith. Wisdom Sits in Places. Albuquerque, NM: University of New Mexico Press, 1996. ISBN: 9780826317247.

Amazon logo Cronon, William. Changes in the Land. New York, NY: Hill & Wang, 2003. ISBN: 9780809016341.

Amazon logo Solnit, Rebecca. River of Shadows: Eadweard Muybridge and Technological Wild West. New York, NY: Penguin, 2004. ISBN: 9780142004104.

Amazon logo White, Richard. The Organic Machine. New York, NY: Hill & Wang, 1996. ISBN: 9780809015832.

Amazon logo Worster, Donald. Dust Bowl. New York, NY: Oxford University Press, 2004 [1979]. ISBN: 9780195174885.

Please note that the reading assignments should be completed before class on the day they are listed.

Students will be required to write 1-2 page reading response papers in preparation for weekly discussions. Response papers will be graded. Please email me your response papers no later than midnight the night before our discussion so that I can circulate them to the rest of the class. Response papers have two purposes: to help you generate ideas and questions about the week's topic, and to serve as a starting point for our discussion.

There are three (3) formal writing assignments in this class, as well as a revision of your final paper. I will distribute specific assignment descriptions for each paper as the course gets underway. Today is not too early to start thinking about your final paper, which can explore one of the course topics or a subject related to your other coursework or interests. I will help you design your topics and identify primary and secondary sources, and I will provide more specific research guidelines as you proceed.



Grading Policy


Students are expected to adhere to principles of academic honesty in their work. All written work must be a student's own original work. (Collaboration on essay assignments is not permitted.) Any and all references to other sources within your own paper must be properly documented according to the guidelines in the Chicago Manual of Style. If you have any questions about quoting, paraphrasing, or referring to the work of others, please ask! MIT's Academic Integrity handbook is a valuable resource that I urge you all to consult.

Grades will be calculated as follows:


ACTIVITIESPERCENTAGES
Paper 1 (5 pages)20%
Paper 2 (5-7 pages)25%
Paper 3 (10-12 pages)40%

Class participation:

  • Reading response papers - 5%
  • Leading of class discussion - 5%
  • General participation in weekly discussions - 5%
15%

Please note that late papers will be penalized unless you have made prior arrangements with me for an extension.



Course Schedule



LEC #TOPICSKEY DATES
Week 1. Introduction and problems of definition
1Course overview and introductory lecture
2Discussion: defining Technology and Nature
Week 2. Colonial American land use
3A brief history of ecological change in North America in the eighteenth century
4DiscussionReading response paper due
Week 3. Places and how we know them
5DiscussionReading response paper due
Week 4. Industrial America in the countryside
6Imposing an industrial order on the antebellum landscape
7Discussion
Week 5. The aesthetics of the industrial landscape in antebellum America
8

"Devilish iron horse" and "Aeolian harp": artistic responses to industrialization

Paper 1 due
9Discussion
Week 6. Railroads and colonization
10

View film: The Iron Road. Directed by Neil Goodwin. PBS: The American experience, 1990, 60 min.

Final paper topic due
11DiscussionReading response paper due
Week 7. Making an agricultural landscape
12

View films: The Plow That Broke the Plains. Directed by Pare Lorentz, 1936, 25 min). (View and download at the Internet Archive.)

The River. Directed by Pare Lorentz, 1938, 31 min. (View and download (Part 1, Part 2) at the Internet Archive.)

13DiscussionReading response paper due
Week 8. Technological systems and the transformation of time and space in the late nineteenth century
14Networking nation and nature: a case study of weather telegraphy, 1870-1891
15DiscussionReading response paper due
Week 9. Creating American parklands
16Conservation and the scientific management of naturePaper 2 due
17Discussion
Week 10. Water and the hydraulic society
18View film Cadillac Desert. Directed by Jon Else and Linda Harrar, 1997, 60 min.
19DiscussionReading response paper due
Week 11. Labors of and in nature: rivers, energy, and work
20Discussion
Week 12. The landscape of postwar suburbia
21Levittown and the building of the suburban family idealDraft of final paper due
22Discussion
Week 13. The landscape of food
23How food became fast, or, industrial agriculture in the twentieth century
24Discussion
Week 14. Presentations of student research projects
25Student presentations
26Student presentations (cont.)Final paper due

 








© 2009-2020 HigherEdSpace.com, All Rights Reserved.
Higher Ed Space ® is a registered trademark of AmeriCareers LLC.