Subject Area: Environmental Humanities<br/><br/>Though climate change is typically understood as a scientific or environmental problem, that requires economic or technological solutions, it is perhaps better understood as a social, cultural and political phenomenon which is remaking the ways in which we understand our relationship with the Earth. How we understand climate, weather, nature and the environment are crucial for understanding contemporary global warming and our responses to it. ARTS2242 begins from this proposition and examines the underlying politics of climate change. It is designed to equip students with a conceptual and methodological toolkit for interpreting and making... -- Course Website
Prerequisites: 30 units of credit at Level 1