Semester.ly

Johns Hopkins University | AS.145.106

Health, Science, Environment

3.0

credits

Average Course Rating

(4.05)

Environment has an inexorable effect on human health, and certain human activities have had outsized impacts on the natural world and the ability of forms of life to thrive. This course brings medical humanities, history of science, and science & technology studies into conversation with environmental humanities to ask: how have our conceptions of the natural world emerged, and how have these shaped our understandings of bodies, ecologies, and health outcomes? How do we know and measure the environment and health, and to what effects? How have human and ecological health affected environmental politics? How have writers and artists understood and depicted their environments and environmental questions? Can works of fiction shape ecological transformations? What can we learn from case studies of health and environment in Baltimore and the Chesapeake Bay as well as in global contexts? Course topics will include ecology, epigenetics, toxicity, agriculture and food, radiation, air quality, and more-than-human entanglements.

Fall 2022

(4.04)

Fall 2022

(4.08)

Fall 2022

(4.04)

Fall 2022

Professor: Marina Bedran

(4.04)

Fall 2022

Professor: Nicole Labruto

(4.08)

Fall 2022

Professor: Lijing Jiang

(4.04)