Writing, Culture and Ecology
Undergraduate
LTU-ENG3WCE 2024Course information for 2024 intake View information for 2025 course intake
Enrolments for this course are closed, but you may have other options to start studying now. Book a consultation to learn more.
- Study method
- On-campus
- Assessments
- 100% online
- Entry requirements
- Prior study needed
- Duration
- 12 weeks
- Loan available
- HECS-HELP and FEE-HELP available
Writing, Culture and Ecology
About this subject
On successful completion you will be able to:
- Identify key debates in the field of ecocriticism and cultural ecology.
- Demonstrate understanding of the ways literary texts engage with their literary, biomaterial, political, and historical contexts.
- Formulate arguments based on critical analysis of a range of texts in environmental literature
- Reflect critically on the practical and ethical role of literature in communicating ideas about the relationship between societies and environments
- Lyrebirds and Poetry
- Silent Spring and Ecological Polemic
- Elegy and Extinction
- Mycology and Literature
- Blade Runner 2040 and Eco-Apocalypse
- Things Fall Apart
- False Claims of Colonial Thieves
This subject asks how writing has shaped relationships between 'culture' and 'nature' from the beginning of the Anthropocene in the late 1700s to the present. You will explore key literary scenes that have dramatically reimagined 'nature', 'the environment', and the future of life: from the poetry of untameable nature produced alongside the mass urbanisation of the Industrial Revolution; to the mode of ecological polemic that coincides with the rise of environmentalism as a political movement in the 1960s and 70s; to Indigenous story-telling as a caring for country through the violence of settler colonization; to writing in our present moment, with an awareness of what to many seems a foreshortened future. Literature has not always been a benign force in the relationships between people and the more-than-human world; what role does it have in understanding and storying the present and future of that relationship?
This is a level 3 subject. Please consider the subject pre-requisites before enrolling. This subject includes live sessions with the expectation of student attendance and participation.
- LMS Workshops: short-answer responses to online tasks (1200 words equivalent) (30%)
- Textual analysis: 1200 words. (30%)
- Research project: 1800 words. (40%)
For textbook details check your university's handbook, website or learning management system (LMS).
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- QS Ranking 2024:
- 17
- Times Higher Education Ranking 2024:
- 18
Entry requirements
Others
Prerequisites: Students must have completed 60 credit points of Level two subjects.
Additional requirements
No additional requirements
Study load
- 0.125 EFTSL
- This is in the range of 10 to 12 hours of study each week.
Equivalent full time study load (EFTSL) is one way to calculate your study load. One (1.0) EFTSL is equivalent to a full-time study load for one year.
Find out more information on Commonwealth Loans to understand what this means to your eligibility for financial support.
What to study next?
Once you’ve completed this subject it can be credited towards one of the following courses
Undergraduate
LAT-BUS-DEGUndergraduate
LAT-ART-DEGBachelor of Information Technology
Undergraduate
LAT-TEC-DEGBachelor of Psychological Science
Undergraduate
LAT-PYS-DEGUndergraduate
LAT-HSC-DEGUndergraduate
LAT-CYS-DEGSingle subject FAQs
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