ABSTRACT

Wild Romanticism consolidates contemporary thinking about conceptions of the wild in British and European Romanticism, clarifying the emergence of wilderness as a cultural, symbolic, and ecological idea.

This volume brings together the work of twelve scholars, who examine representations of wildness in canonical texts such as Frankenstein, Northanger Abbey, "Kubla Khan," "Expostulation and Reply," and Childe Harold´s Pilgrimage, as well as lesser-known works by Radcliffe, Clare, Hölderlin, P.B. Shelley, and Hogg. Celebrating the wild provided Romantic-period authors with a way of thinking about nature that resists instrumentalization and anthropocentricism, but writing about wilderness also engaged them in debates about the sublime and picturesque as aesthetic categories, about gender and the cultivation of independence as natural, and about the ability of natural forces to resist categorical or literal enclosure.

This book will be of great interest to students and scholars of Romanticism, environmental literature, environmental history, and the environmental humanities more broadly.

chapter |14 pages

Introduction

chapter 3|16 pages

Plumbing the depths of wildness

From the picturesque to John Clare

chapter 4|15 pages

Savage, holy, enchanted

Coleridge in concert with the wild

chapter 5|17 pages

Human grapes in the wine-presses

Vegetable life and the violence of cultivation in Blake’s Milton

chapter 9|14 pages

“Almost Wild”

Jane Austen’s dirtiest of heroines

chapter 10|15 pages

“Wild above rule or art”

Volcanic luxuriance, subterranean terror, and the nature of gender in Ann Radcliffe’s A Sicilian Romance

chapter 11|16 pages

“A strange unearthly climate”

James Hogg’s tale of the Arctic wild

chapter 12|16 pages

“Vast and irregular plains of ice”

Wilderness as smooth space in Frankenstein