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ENV S193RE

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ENV S 193RE - Religion and Ecology

Environmental Studies College of Letters and Science

Full Course Title

Religion and Ecology

Instructor Name(s)

STAFF

Course Description

Course explores Western religious and philosophical roots of human separation from, and assumed superiority to, nature and non-human beings that underlie contemporary extractivism (drilling, mining, deforestation, industrial fisheries, etc.). Via selected texts from the ancient world through the “Scientific Revolution” we locate patterns of belief that, for many, persist into the present. We then explore the time of the “Great Dying” in the Americas following European conquest, turning to alternate religious orientations to the natural world. Our particular focus will be on Indigenous worldviews and practices that enmesh human beings within a “covenant of reciprocity” with ancestors, with other living beings, and with the land.

Min

1

Max

5

Maximum number of times course can be repeated for additional credit

0

Maximum Units

5

Prerequisites

Upper-division standing.

Advisory Enrollment Comments

May be repeated for credit to a maximum of 20 units provided letter designations are different.