ABSTRACT

Exploring the literature of environmental moral dilemmas from the Hebrew Bible to modern times, this book argues the necessity of cross-disciplinary approaches to environmental studies, as a subject affecting everyone, in every aspect of life.

Moral dilemmas are central in the literary genre of protest against the effects of industry, particularly in Romantic literature and ‘Condition of England’ novels. Writers from the time of the Industrial Revolution to the present—including William Blake, Elizabeth Gaskell, Charles Dickens, Émile Zola, Henrik Ibsen, Anton Chekhov, T.S. Eliot, John Steinbeck, George Orwell, and J.M. Coetzee—follow the Bible in seeing environmental problems in moral terms, as a consequence of human agency. The issues raised by these and other writers—including damage to the environment and its effects on health and quality of life, particularly on the poor; economic conflicts of interest; water and air pollution, deforestation, and the environmental effects of war—are fundamentally the same today, making their works a continual source of interest and insight.

Sketching a brief literary history on the impact of human behavior on the environment, this volume will be of interest to readers researching environmental studies, literary studies, religious studies and international development, as well as a useful resource to scientists and readers of the Arts.

chapter |12 pages

Introduction

chapter 2|14 pages

Nature and the biblical calendar

Festivals and psalms

chapter 3|7 pages

‘Promised lands’ and national poetry

chapter 4|13 pages

Sacred landscapes in exile

chapter 5|13 pages

Kadosh! Kadosh! Kadosh!

chapter 6|6 pages

The Bible, charity, and agricultural law

chapter 7|8 pages

The piper at the gates of dawn

Loss and Nature

chapter 8|5 pages

‘Man is the tree of the field’

chapter 9|6 pages

Free will, divine law, and science

chapter 10|7 pages

Energy and its abuse

chapter 11|8 pages

Environmental disaster in the Bible

chapter 12|7 pages

The apocalyptic beast let loose

chapter 13|4 pages

Swords to ploughshares

The vision of universal peace

chapter 14|8 pages

Humility

God's reply to Job from the whirlwind—where were you?

chapter 15|7 pages

Industry and the Romantics

Blake, Wordsworth, and Goethe

chapter 17|3 pages

Marx

The industrial environment as crime

chapter 18|3 pages

Ibsen, Chekhov, and the moral environment

chapter 20|6 pages

The Waste Land

Sin and suffering

chapter 22|5 pages

Post-1945 literature

The quest for a lost Eden