ARTH 307 The North American Park Idea (Same as Environmental Studies 307) (Not offered 1997-98; to be offered 1998-99)
A research seminar considering those sites whose nature may be displayed
in an idealized form, for reasons of stewardship, curiosity, delectation,
or some other intention. Among the "open-spaces" to be studied, both in terms
of design intent and design execution, are: commons and squares; groves and
pleasure grounds; cemeteries; exposition grounds; playgrounds; a few "landmark"
subdivisions; and those large natural areas of reservations generally subsumed,
in common usage, by the wording "national park." Many of these "parks" are
sites of leisure activities, and the design and furnishing of outdoor recreation
will be a major concomitant theme. One kind of primary evidence, in the form
of texts, will be contemporary reports, letters, and journals from the period
of these sites' creation. Secondary evidence will lie in accounts of the
behavior induced by the scouting, wilderness, ecological and naturalist-explorer
movements. Frederick Law Olmsted, Steven Mather, Robert Moses, and Walt Disney
are among the seminal figures whose careers in park creation will be
scrutinized.
Evaluation will be based on four essays and a class presentation. (This course
includes an obligatory all-day field trip to the Boston environs, beginning
with the new Financial District park at Post Office Square and the seventeenth
century Old Granary Burying Grounds and the Boston Common, and by foot continuing
out the Emerald Necklace some ten miles to the Arnold Arboretum's living
collections and to Franklin Park.)
No prerequisites. Open to sophomores. Enrollment limited to 12.
SATTERTHWAITE