SMC Core Curriculum Course Proposal 1. Name of proponent: Professor Myrna Santiago 2. E-Mail address: msantiag@stmarys-ca.edu 3. Department of proponent: History 4. Name of Department hosting the course: History 5. Name of Department Chair: Myrna Santiago 6. Course Information: History 155: Latin American Environmental History 7. Semester in which the course will be offered: Spring 2014 8. How often is this course taught: Every other year 9. Course prerequisites: None 10. Unit value of course: One 11. Proper audience for course: sophomores, juniors, seniors 12. The learning goals for which the course is being submitted: Engaging the World: Global Perspectives, Option 2 Teaching Narrative for Global Perspectives The course will examine how specific Latin American countries constructed their own interpretations of nature, the relationship between humans and their environments, and interacted with nature over time, focusing on the consequences of those behaviors for humans and nature. With regards to the learning objective of asking students to demonstrate an understanding of the world from a specific non-US and non-Western European viewpoint, the course will ask students to do address the following in class discussion: identify how different sectors of Latin American society understood their relationship with and to nature and the ecosystems they inhabited at any given point in time; what theories, if any, Latin Americans used to describe that relationship; and what social, political, or economic processes affected their ideas about nature and their behavior towards it. To demonstrate understanding of all of the above, students will write three papers, each emphasizing different historical skills, but two of them explicitly asking them to focus on the Latin Americans’ point of view and interpretation of nature and the human-nature relationship (see description of assignments below). Learning Narrative for Global Perspectives The course will use oral participation and three papers to evaluate students’ progress in understanding how Latin Americans interpreted the human-nature relationship. Using a Socratic method, I aim to steer oral participation in the direction of discussing Latin American notions of nature and environment from a critical perspective. Thus the requirements for participation are stringent (see syllabus) and student participation is carefully monitored. Three writing assignments, increasing in length, focus on the constituent parts of the learning goal: defining terms, articulating someone else’s point of view accurately, critiquing, and doing research based on primary and secondary sources. The research paper allows students to focus on their own interests by choosing the country and environmental issue to investigate. Syllabus Professor Myrna Santiago Latin American Environmental History Description. The importance of ecology cannot be denied in the twenty-first century. But is there a history to modern environmental concerns in Latin America? This course will approach that single question by analyzing a selection of cases from Latin American environmental history from the colonial period into the twentieth century. Using the latest scholarship on environmental history as our guide, we will explore topics that may include: conservation; oil extraction; monocrop and organic agriculture; the steroids industry; the environmental history of corn, bananas, or sugar; nuclear power; pesticide use; hurricanes; climate; forests; national parks; whale conservation; mining and disease. Students will read monographs and chart the social, political, and economic forces that shaped how Latin Americans interpreted nature at different times in history and in different countries; how their points of view shaped the use they made of their environment and the relationship between humans and their environments at different times and in different countries; and what sorts of problems they encountered and created in the process, including the consequences of policies and lack thereof for humans and nature alike. Learning outcomes. As a result of this course, students will be able to explain what environmental history is in general. They will also become familiar with the terminology of the discipline of history and environmental studies, particularly ecology, ecosystems, nature, and sustainability. Students will be able to describe the multiple factors involved in environmental policy over time and the multiple causes behind ecological practices in different countries at different times in history. They will also demonstrate that they can find, identify and interpret primary sources and figure out cause and effect in historical ecological change, in addition to articulating how Latin Americans interpreted their environments during different times and in different countries. Students will also continue to sharpen their critical reading skills, to develop their expository writing skills, and to improve their research skills. Requirements. Student participation is 25% of the grade. That means daily attendance, active participation in class that advances the discussion and raises its intellectual quality, and participation in two History co-curricular events over the course of the semester. Three papers are required. The first is a 5-page book review of a book selected by the professor (footnotes and bibliography are additional pages; instructions attached; 20% of the grade). The second is a 7 page analytical piece articulating how Latin Americans have understood nature and environmental matters during specific times in history (footnotes and bibliography are additional pages; instructions attached; 20% of the grade). The third is a 10-page research paper on an environmental issue that affects a specific Latin American country, identifying and interpreting primary sources in addition to using the secondary literature (35% of the grade). Deadlines for research proposal, bibliography, thesis, and outline are noted in the class schedule. Please note that Wikipedia is banned in this class. Internet sources must be scholarly. Drafts of papers are highly encouraged. Re-writes are not allowed, but may be required by the professor in some cases. Paper due dates are not flexible. Note on plagiarism. Make sure you are intimately familiar with what plagiarism is. If you plagiarize, even unintentionally, you will not only fail the course, but also face disciplinary action. Check your student handbook for definitions and information about plagiarism at Saint Mary’s. Policy regarding disabilities: Student Disability Services extends reasonable and appropriate accommodations that take into account the context of the course and its essential elements, for individuals with qualifying disabilities. Students with disabilities are encouraged to contact the Student Disability Services Director at (925) 631-4164 to set up a confidential appointment to discuss accommodation guidelines and available services. Additional information regarding the services available may be found at the following address on the Saint Mary’s website: http://www.stmarys-ca.edu/academics/academic-advisingand-achievement/student-disability-services.html Class etiquette. Education is a formal, serious, and professional affair. Therefore, classroom demeanor must be up to par: no tardiness, no early departures, no food (drinks are fine), no cell phones. Agreement on ideas is by no means expected, but respect for each other’s opinions is required. Readings: (Note to core curriculum committee: these will change depending on the geographic focus of the course any given semester) On Latin America as a whole: Shawn Miller, An Environmental History of Latin America Alfred Crosby, The Columbian Exchange: Biological and Cultural Consequences of 1492 Noble Cook, Born to Die: Disease and New World Conquest, 1492-1650 Richard P. Tucker, Insatiable Appetite: The United States and the Ecological Degradation of the Tropical World On the Andes: Mark Carey, In the Shadow of Melting Glaciers: Climate Change and Andean Society Nicholas A. Robins, Mercury, Mining, and Empire: The Human and Ecological Cost of Colonial Silver Mining in the Andes On Central America: John Soluri, Banana Cultures: Agriculture, Consumption, and Environmental Change in Honduras and the United States On the Caribbean: Reinaldo Funes Monzote, From Rainforest to Cane Field in Cuba: An Environmental History since 1492 Sherry Johnson, Climate and Catastrophe in Cuba and the Atlantic World in the Age of Revolution Louis Perez, Jr. Winds of Change: Hurricanes and the Transformation of NineteenthCentury Cuba J. R. McNeill, Mosquito Empires: Ecology and War in the Greater Caribbean, 1620-1914 Stuart McCook, States of Nature: Science, Agriculture, and Environment in the Spanish Caribbean, 1760-1940 On Mexico: Velma Garcia-Gorena, Mothers and the Mexican Antinuclear Power Movement Elinor Melville, A Plague of Sheep: Environmental Consequences of the Conquest of Mexico Serge Dedina, Saving the Gray Whale: People, Politics, and Conservation in Baja California Lane Simonean, Defending the Land of the Jaguar: A History of Conservation in Mexico Myrna Santiago, The Ecology of Oil: Environment, Labor, and the Mexican Revolution, 1900-1938 Angus Wright, The Death of Ramón González: The Modern Agricultural Dilemma, Gabriela Soto Laveaga, Jungle Laboratories: Mexican Peasants, National Projects, and the Making of the Pill Arturo Warman, Corn Capitalism: How a Botanical Bastard Grew to Global Dominance Emily Wakild, Revolutionary Parks: Conservation, Social Justice, and Mexico’s National Parks, 1910-1940 (Note to core curriculum committee: Class Schedule is omitted because the readings will change depending on the countries covered in any given semester) Assignments: I. Book Review. Write a book review of book selected by the professor. The book review will be a minimum of 5 pages of text (double space, 12-size font, 1 inch margins). Notes and bibliography are additional. The book review contains the following components: 1. Summary of the book. This component is the first, and it provides the reader with a summary of the entire book. In the first paragraph of this section, you will identify the argument the author makes, explaining his/her thesis, why is the author writing this book, what is he/she trying to convey, why does she/he think the topic is important. In the second paragraph, you will explain what the main points of each chapter are. In the third paragraph you will tell the reader what conclusions the author reached. Do not quote directly from the book, but do note page numbers in footnotes as necessary. 2. Examination of sources and point of view. In this section, describe what kinds of sources the author utilized in the book and where they came from. Explain how much the author relied on primary sources and how much she/he relied on secondary sources. Explain as well if the author represented a Latin American point of view or only his/her own. 2. Evaluation and critique. In this section you will evaluate two different aspects of the book in separate paragraphs: the strengths and the weaknesses. For each part, explain why you think some parts are strengths and why some are weaknesses. Some questions to guide the evaluation may be: what would you like to have read more or less of? What else might the author have included? Was there something that was misleading or incomplete? Is the argument convincing or not? 3. Recommendation. In this last paragraph, make a recommendation about whether the book is worth reading and why or why not. If you recommend it, explain what audience should read this book and why. 4. Footnotes go at the end (“endnotes” in computer parlance). The bibliography is the last page. II. Analytical Paper. Write 7 pages of text answering the following questions: How did Latin Americans interpret nature and the relationship between humans and their environments in the colonial period, the 19th century, and the 20th century? What changed over time? What continuities remained? Footnotes go at the end of the paper (“endnotes” in your computer program); the bibliography is the last page. III. Research paper: Writing your own Environmental History Write 10 pages of text investigating any environmental issue affecting a Latin American country in the past or the present. Consult with the professor on topics and sources. The components of the paper are as follows: 1. Research proposal. This is a one-page assignment where you write one paragraph (single spaced) explaining what question you are going to answer, why, how might you answer that question, and what types of sources you are going to use. You will also speculate about what answers you think you might find. 2. Bibliography. This is a one-page list of all the sources you have found up to the date when the assignment is due. Your sources should include primary sources, academic journals, chapters from books, books, and news sources. Web sources that are none of the above must be checked with me first, explaining how and why you want to use each specific site. For a 10-page paper, you need at least 10 different sources. 3. Thesis and outline. The thesis is one sentence that summarizes the argument you will make for the whole paper. Outline the sections that will comprise the paper, including paragraphs if possible. 4. A full draft of the paper is due on x date, for feedback and direction. 5. The final paper is due on the day and time of our final exam.