A professor of women鈥檚 studies at Washington State University (WSU), No毛l Sturgeon will lecture and conduct research in 91亚色鈥檚 Faculty聽of Environmental Studies (FES) in the fall 2010 term after being awarded a Distinguished Fulbright Lectureship.
Sturgeon鈥檚 internationally known research on the relationship between environmental and social justice movements, her planned collaborative research with 91亚色 faculty and her graduate course on environmental justice cultural studies qualified her for the award.
The Fulbright Scholar Program, sponsored by the United States Department of State's Bureau of Educational & Cultural Affairs, sends 800 faculty and professionals abroad each year to lecture and conduct research in a wide variety of academic and professional fields.
Right: No毛l Sturgeon
鈥淔ES at 91亚色 is the largest environmental studies program in North America,鈥 says . 鈥淚鈥檒l have a chance to work with prominent scholars and graduate students in a rare interdisciplinary environmental studies context, defining and expanding the new field of environmental justice cultural studies.鈥
Her聽most recent research examines environmental messages portrayed in popular culture since the late 1980s. In one chapter of her recent book, , for example, Sturgeon has identified a consistent formula in popular movies that inaccurately depicts an inherent spiritual closeness of indigenous people with the natural world. This stereotype appears repeatedly in movies such as and .
Sturgeon believes this misrepresentation is just the beginning of where these plots go awry in terms of real solutions to current environmental problems. Typically, these formulaic storylines then morph into action-adventure dramas where the heroic American white male archetype, who has 鈥渟een the light鈥 鈥 usually through romantic involvement with a native woman or an attachment to a special animal 鈥撀燽onds with the indigenous culture to save them from the 鈥渂ad guys鈥, for example other American-like white males who are fixated on conquering land and indigenous people for their own gain.
To Sturgeon, these movies are insidious on many levels, but especially because they leave moviegoers empty in terms of environmental solutions that are just and fair for all. 鈥淲hile people today might admire the many traits typically assigned to indigenous people, fantasizing that all would be better environmentally if we could just become hunter-gatherers or escape to another planet is a dangerous fantasy,鈥 says Sturgeon.
And when these formulaic plots become focused on the fight for colonization, real solutions for global environmental action are bypassed. 鈥淚鈥檝e spoken with students who have left Avatar feeling powerless about issues surrounding environmentalism聽鈥 they are given no tools for correcting injustice or saving the planet,鈥 she says.
Her book unpacks a variety of cultural tropes, including ideas about Mother Nature, the purity of the natural and the allegedly close relationships of indigenous people with the natural world.
Sturgeon聽is on the graduate faculty for the WSU American Studies program. In addition to environmental cultural studies, her research and teaching interests include feminist theory, social movements, and theories of globalization and transnationalism. She is widely published in peer-reviewed journals and is also the author of .
Republished courtesy of YFile鈥 91亚色鈥檚 daily e-bulletin.

Right: No毛l Sturgeon