USING NINETEENTH CENTURY LITERATURE IN GEOSCIENCE CLASSROOMS
I have used Mark Twains Life on the Mississippi, Roughing It and his essay Was the World Made for Man?; Jules Vernes Journey to the Center of the Earth, and Henrik Ibsens An Enemy of the People as required reading in introductory geology, geomorphology and hydrology courses. Mark Twain describes longitudinal and temporal changes in fluvial systems better than any textbook I know. Life on the Mississippi also contains Twains reflections on whether empirical knowledge heightens or diminishes an individuals perception of natural systems, a subject of interest to all students and teachers. It is great fun teasing apart Vernes account of volcanoes and subterranean geology and comparing it to the pictures of the earths interior drawn from modern geophysics. (The movie, starring Pat Boone, is another matter altogether). And Thomas Stockmanns devotion to his science (environmental hydrology and microbiology) adds an unusual dimension of character to the political and domestic drama of An Enemy of the People. Not only do these accounts offer geoscience students a welcome change from normal reading assignments, they can be used to stimulate discussions of professional ethics, history of geoscience ideas in both professional and societal contexts, and concepts of deep time and space.