For academics, students and general readers interested in how literature intersects with environmental history, a focus on Walter Scott and nineteenth-century writing puts this study in the context of the emerging Anthropocene. Scotland's human and nonhuman land relations along with ecocritical theory provide national and global perspectives.
For academics, students and general readers interested in how literature intersects with environmental history, a focus on Walter Scott and nineteenth-century writing puts this study in the context of the emerging Anthropocene. Scotland's human and nonhuman land relations along with ecocritical theory provide national and global perspectives.
Susan Oliver is Deputy Dean (Research) at the Faculty of Arts and Humanities, University of Essex. She is the winner of the British Academy's Rose Mary Crawshay prize for Scott, Byron and the Poetics of Cultural Encounter (2006), and is also the editor of The Yearbook of English Studies: New Approaches to Walter Scott (2017).
Inhaltsangabe
1. Introduction: Walter Scott and the Environment 2. Shifting Ecologies: Grasslands, Rivers and Shorelines 3. Toxic Ecologies, Ecogothic, and Violence Against the Land 4. Wild Places, Rarity and Extinction 5. Trees 6. Stone, Water, Air.
1. Introduction: Walter Scott and the Environment 2. Shifting Ecologies: Grasslands, Rivers and Shorelines 3. Toxic Ecologies, Ecogothic, and Violence Against the Land 4. Wild Places, Rarity and Extinction 5. Trees 6. Stone, Water, Air.
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