The Early Modern Center at the University of California, Santa Barbara is pleased to announce our Winter Conference, "Before Environmentalism," which will take place on Friday, March 6, 2009 in the McCune Conference Room, HSSB 6020.
In recent years, scholars have looked to the Renaissance and eighteenth century in order to better understand both the origins of our contemporary environmental crisis, as well as the emergence of modern environmental thinking. Works such as Robert Watson's Back to Nature: The Green and the Real in the Late Renaissance and Gabriel Egan's Green Shakespeare: From Ecopolitics to Ecocriticism, have brought early modern literary studies into current ecocritical debate. As these and other works make clear, environmental issues such as air pollution, toxic waste, increased urbanization, deforestation, wetland loss, and radical changes in land use were surprisingly timely in Early Modern England, routinely making their appearance in the literature of the day. Indeed, by the time Milton was writing Paradise Lost it was already known that respiratory illness from urban air pollution was second only to the Plague as the leading cause of death in London. The EMC's one-day interdisciplinary conference will provide a forum to explore early modern literary and cultural responses to the environmental issues that preceded, and indeed gave shape to, modern environmentalism.
The conference will consist of panel discussions, as well as keynote talks by Carolyn Merchant (Professor of Environmental History, Philosophy, and Ethics in the Department of Environmental Science, Policy and Management, UC Berkeley) and Jill Casid (Associate Professor of Art History and Director of the Visual Culture Studies Program, University of Wisconsin).
ONLINE CONFERENCE REGISTRATION
The EMC thanks the following conference sponsors:
American Cultures & Global Contexts Center
Interdisciplinary Humanities Center
Department of Feminist Studies
Donald Bren School of Environmental Science and Management
Department of Environmental Studies