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  • Teaching with Science Writing in the Humanities Classroom

    Teaching with Science Writing in the Humanities Classroom by Dushane, Allison; Ottum, Lisa; Powell, Rosalind;

    Series: Options for Teaching;

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    Product details:

    • Publisher Modern Language Association of America
    • Date of Publication 20 February 2026

    • ISBN 9781603297165
    • Binding Paperback
    • No. of pages294 pages
    • Size 228x152 mm
    • Weight 363 g
    • Language English
    • 700

    Categories

    Short description:

    Exploring fusion of scientific and literary inquiry, essays demonstrate how science writing bridges humanities and research. Engaging with historical debates and cultural analyses, the volume offers practical strategies for teaching interdisciplinary, justice-minded pedagogies that enrich both general education and advanced studies.

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    Long description:

    Options for teaching science writing in humanities courses

    Science writing is an expansive genre that invites collaborations between the humanities and science—not as separate endeavors but as mutually constitutive practices. Engaging with long-standing scholarly conversations in science and technology studies, literature and science, rhetoric, and science communication, the essays in this volume showcase the value of science writing as a mode of cultural analysis, as an object of close reading, and as a foundation for justice-oriented pedagogies. Readers will find practical strategies for teaching science writing in literature, writing, and interdisciplinary classrooms, from general education courses to electives to graduate courses.

    This volume also contains discussion of the following authors and works: Adelard of Bath, Quaestiones naturales (Natural Questions); Albertus Magnus, On Animals; Amy Matilda Cassey; Geoffrey Chaucer, Parliament of Fowls; Samuel Taylor Coleridge, The Rime of the Ancient Mariner; Charles Darwin; Lorraine Daston and Peter Galison, Objectivity; Emily Dickinson; Amitav Ghosh, The Hungry Tide; Ibn al-Nafis, Theologus Autodidactus (Self-Taught Theologian); Robin Wall Kimmerer, Braiding Sweetgrass; Jamaica Kincaid, My Garden (Book); Thomas S. Kuhn, The Structure of Scientific Revolutions; Bruno Latour; Marie de France, “Bisclavret” (“The Werewolf”); Aimee Nezhukumatathil, World of Wonders; Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society; Britt Rusert, Fugitive Science; C. P. Snow, The Two Cultures; Bram Stoker, Dracula; Émile Zola, L’Assommoir.

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    Table of Contents:

    Introduction: Science Literacy and Science Writing: A Call to Humanists, by Allison Dushane, Lisa Ottum, and Rosalind Powell

    Part I: Historical Science Writing

    Before Objectivity: Pluralizing Science with Premodern Knowledge, by Aylin Malcolm

    Epistolary Science: The Early Philosophical Transactions, by Rosalind Powell

    Less Than Nothing in The Rime of the Ancient Mariner: Literature, Mathematics, Realism, and Anti-Realism, by Aaron Ottinger

    The Vampire We Need: Bram Stoker’s Dracula and the Victorian Science of the Mind, by Melissa Dickson

    Botany in the American Literature Classroom: Emily Dickinson and Amy Matilda Cassey, by Julia Dauer

    Experiments with the Science of Alcoholism, by Susanna Lee

    Part II: General Education and Writing Courses

    Digital Science Communication in Rhetoric and Writing Courses, by Laura McGrath

    Science, Stories, and Academic Ecology, by Marissa Kopp

    Environmental Science Communication as Storytelling, by Luke Rodewald

    Embracing Subjectivity: Humanizing and Historicizing Science Writing in the Post-Pandemic Classroom, by Scott C. Thompson

    Science Writing as a General Education Linchpin, by Matthew Newcomb

    Part III: Science Writing for Change

    Anti-Racist Science Writing: Environmental Justice and Energy Futures in the Interdisciplinary Humanities Classroom, by Davy Knittle, Annesha Manocha, and Arielle Rivera

    Women’s Historical Ecomedia and Environmental Advocacy, by Bridgitte Barclay

    Jamaica Kincaid’s Anti-Colonial, Black, Cross-Species, Embodied, Feminist Onto-Epistemologies, by Nicole M. Merola

    Multispecies Relationships: Nonhumans and Knowledge Production in Science Writing, by Nathaniel Otjen

    Part IV: Courses and Assignments

    The Critic Afield: Field Guides as Tools for Interdisciplinary Close Reading, by John MacNeill Miller

    Teaching the Invisible: Science, Labor, and Pedagogy, by Xan Sarah Chacko

    Teaching with the Hive: Beekeeping as a Scientific and Creative Practice, by James Barilla

    Sex, Gender, and the Short Story, by Nancy Easterlin

    Science Writing and the Art of Interpretation, by Joshua DiCaglio

    Taming a Two-Headed Beast: Integrating Science, Literature, and the Living World, by Bryan Shawn Wang and Sandy Feinstein

    Part V: Resources

    Notes on Contributors

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