HIST152 - LIQUID HISTORIES AND FLOATING ARCHIVES

Status
O
Activity
LEC
Title (text only)
HIST152 - LIQUID HISTORIES AND FLOATING ARCHIVES
Term
2018C
Subject area
HIST
Section number only
401
Section ID
HIST152401
Meeting times
TR 1030AM-1200PM
Meeting location
GODDARD LAB 102
Instructors
WIGGIN, BETHANY
Description
Climate change transforms the natural and built environments, and it is re-shaping how we understand, make sense, and care for our past. Climate changes history. This course explores the Anthropocene, the age when humans are remaking earth's systems, from an on-water perspective. In on-line dialogue and video conferences with research teams in port cities on four continents, this undergraduate course focuses on Philadelphia as one case study of how rising waters are transfiguring urban history, as well as its present and future. Students projects take them into the archives at the Independence Seaport Museum and at Bartram's Garden. Field trips by boat on the Schuylkill and Delaware Rivers and on land to the Port of Philadelphia and to the John Heinz National Wildlife Refuge invite transhistorical dialogues about how colonial and then industrial-era energy and port infrastructure transformed the region's vast tidal marshlands wetlands. Excursions also help document how extreme rain events, storms, and rising waters are re-making the built environment, redrawing lines that had demarcated land from water. In dialogue with one another and invited guest artists, writers, and landscape architects, students final projects consider how our waters might themselves be read and investigated as archives. What do rising seas subsume and hold? Whose stories do they tell? What floats to the surface?
Course number only
152
Use local description
No
LPS Course
false