What can I do in COVE Groups?
Group members
This course addresses a question at the root of our contemporary enrionmental crisis: how might we dwell responsibly in the places we call home, practicing attentive care for our human and non-human neighbors? The class thereby highlights two related senses of dwelling: to dwell in, abide and inhabit, and to dwell on, to give time to something in thought or action. We will focus on a number of authors and activitists in nineteenth-century Britain, each of whom struggled to bring attending and abiding into sensitive and ecological combination. They all found a common point of reference in England's Lake District. Key figures will be authors William and Dorothy Wordsworth, art and social critic John Ruskin, and Anglican clergyman Hardwicke Rawnsley. 