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Mar 14, 2025
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EH 125: Ecology and Indigenous Religious Traditions Units: 4
Studies various Indigenous cultures, and examines how knowledge of the natural world developed through careful observation in a given place over multiple generations. Examines why this knowledge has been rejected by Western cultures, and how with the imminent devastation of climate disaster, scientists are now beginning to recognize that Indigenous Peoples’ data collection of their respective ecosystems has produced valuable knowledge. Understands Indigenous approaches to environmental justice and ecology, recognizing that the Western split from Nature that occurred with the Scientific Revolution erroneously identified humans as superior and separate from non-human life. Reads texts from a variety of Indigenous traditions from authors who attempt to heal this split by sharing traditions that emphasize unity of the self, the community, the natural world, and the sacred. Uncovers images of Indigenous people not as passive people attempting to live in harmony with nature, but rather as agents of environmental change and stewardship, seeking to maintain the traditional ecological knowledge that may well be vital to surviving our increasing environmental crises.
Course Details Repeats Allowed for Credit: 0
Crosslisted with: ENG 125 Normal Letter Grade with Pass/No Pass option
GE Requirements - Intellectual Experience: Diversity and Identity
- Approaches to Knowledge: Literary and Textual Analysis
- Intellectual Experience: Sustainability
- Upper Division: Writing in the Discipline
Requisites and Restrictions Prerequisite Courses: WRI 010 or equivalent exam Open only to the following class level(s): Instructor Permission Required: No
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