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Green Hour: “Learning through Nature: A History of Environmental Education in America.”

Event Details
Date: 18.07.2024, 12:00 o'clock - 13:00 o'clock 
Location: Raum 101, innocube (Geb?ude U), Universit?tsstra?e 1a, 86159 Augsburg
Organizer(s): Prof. Dr. Simone Müller (Environmental History), Prof. Dr. Matthias Schmidt (Human Geography), PD Dr. Kirsten Twelbeck (American Studies, WZU)
Topics: Geografie, Umwelt und ?kologie, Sprache, Literatur und Geschichte, Philosophie und Theologie
Series of events: The Green Hour - A Lunchtime Series by the Environmental Humanities
Event Type: Diskussion
Speaker(s): Prof. Charles Dorn

Climate Change. Species Extinction. Deforestation. Toxic Waste. For more than a century, Americans have quarreled over the causes and consequences of environmental decline.


"My current research?reveals that between?the end of the nineteenth and the beginning of the twenty-first centuries,?educators, entrepreneurs, policymakers, and others systematically indoctrinated young people into settler-colonial political, economic, and cultural values under the guise of learning about the natural world. Why have Americans long been in conflict over the environment? They were taught mostly?through?nature rather than?for?it.

In this talk, I will discuss the origins of his book project as well as the challenges associated with writing an educational history that examines learning both inside and out of formal institutions."

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Charles Dorn is an educational historian and the?Barry N. Wish Professor of Social Studies?at Bowdoin College (Maine, USA). His work has appeared in?History of Education Quarterly,?Southern African Review of Education, and?Diplomatic History, and has been featured in?Time?and?Fortune Magazines?and on National Public Radio’s?Throughline. Dorn is the recipient of two?U.S. State Department Fulbright Awards and a?Landhaus Fellowship at the Rachel Carson Center for Environment and Society,?Ludwig Maximilian University (Munich, Germany).?He is the author of?For the Common Good: A New History of Higher Education in America?(Cornell University Press, 2017) and, with co-author Randall Curren,?Patriotic Education in a Global Age?(University of Chicago Press, 2018). His current project?explores the history of environmental education in the United States between the late nineteenth and early twenty-first centuries.

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