This study examines the vital centrality of 'readings' of nature in a variety of literary forms in the period 1830-1914. It is exploratory and original in approach, stressing the philosophical and cultural implications in a range of texts from Tennyson, Hardy, Jefferies and Thomas.
"This study is engaging and dense. ... Landscape and Literature is a book which combines a deeply ingrained knowledge of English Landscapes in time - landscapes as transcoded by poets and novelists - with a profound conviction that philosophical reflections and theoretical insights cannot be excluded by a topological analysis of literary texts." (Francesco Marroni, RSV - Rivista di Studi Vittoriani, Vol. 20 (40), July, 2015)
''an intriguing book which opens up so many new ways of looking at the relation between literature and the landscape in this period'' Tennyson Research Bulletin
"Roger Ebbatson will be a well-known name to many readers of this journal: his previous work has already played a significant role in recuperating Richard Jefferies as a writer worthy of serious critical and theoretical attention...The book is characterized by intelligent and often arresting juxtapositions, which serve to illuminate canonical writers in new ways,as well as offeringfresh insights into Jefferies's fiction and lesser-known essays....Landscape and Literature is full of erudite and engaging material, with many thought-provoking asides, any number of which could be developed further. The book's 'constellation' structure (as Ebbatson terms it) means it can also be read effectively as a series of discrete essays, dipped into and returned to." Jefferies Society Journal
"...sophisticated and ambitious" Times Literary Supplement
"Roger Ebbatson's writing style as well as his subject gets under the skin... his deeply theoretical work is informed by the Frankfurt school. How often do you hear that linked to ecocriticism?... Altogether, this is an ususual and pentrating examination of 'nature, text, aura', full of quiet insights that should return to haunt future ecocritical studies." Sue Edney, Green Letters: Studies in Ecocriticism
''an intriguing book which opens up so many new ways of looking at the relation between literature and the landscape in this period'' Tennyson Research Bulletin
"Roger Ebbatson will be a well-known name to many readers of this journal: his previous work has already played a significant role in recuperating Richard Jefferies as a writer worthy of serious critical and theoretical attention...The book is characterized by intelligent and often arresting juxtapositions, which serve to illuminate canonical writers in new ways,as well as offeringfresh insights into Jefferies's fiction and lesser-known essays....Landscape and Literature is full of erudite and engaging material, with many thought-provoking asides, any number of which could be developed further. The book's 'constellation' structure (as Ebbatson terms it) means it can also be read effectively as a series of discrete essays, dipped into and returned to." Jefferies Society Journal
"...sophisticated and ambitious" Times Literary Supplement
"Roger Ebbatson's writing style as well as his subject gets under the skin... his deeply theoretical work is informed by the Frankfurt school. How often do you hear that linked to ecocriticism?... Altogether, this is an ususual and pentrating examination of 'nature, text, aura', full of quiet insights that should return to haunt future ecocritical studies." Sue Edney, Green Letters: Studies in Ecocriticism