The Plath Conservatory. In a Spring 2023 Anthropology course, Smith College students majoring in Biological Science, English, Environmental Science and Policy, Computer Science, Anthropology, Government, and more gathered together to investigate the possibility that conservatories are relevant to our understanding of the human condition, focusing on Sylvia Plath’s (‘55) botanical encounters at Lyman in the 1950s. Student essays examine one plant species that features in Plath’s work, accounting for its ecology, geography, and taxonomy; the symbolic work it does in Plath’s writing; and the historical context in which Plath came to know it. Instructor: Colin Hoag, Anthropology
Tag: Anthropology
Africa and the Environment
Africa and the Environment. These essays and collaborative podcasts, produced by students in ANT 229: Africa and the Environment, teach us how to think critically about Western portrayals of African environments, which continue to circulate widely in the USA and abroad. Accessible only via Smith credentials. Instructor: Colin Hoag, Anthropology