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Walter Scott and the Greening of Scotland

Walter Scott and the Greening of Scotland

Walter Scott and the Greening of Scotland

Emergent Ecologies of a Nation
Susan Oliver, University of Essex
December 2023
Available
Paperback
9781108926881

    The work of Walter Scott, one of the most globally influential authors of the nineteenth century, provides us with a unique narrative of the changing ecologies of Scotland over several centuries and writes this narrative into the history of environmental literature. Farmed environments, mountains, moors and forests along with rivers, shorelines, islands and oceans are explored, situating Scott's writing about shared human and nonhuman environments in the context of the emerging Anthropocene. Susan Oliver attends to changes and losses acting in counterpoint to the narratives of 'improvement' that underpin modernization in land management. She investigates the imaginative ecologies of folklore and local culture. Each chapter establishes a dialogue between ecocritical theory and Scott as storyteller of social history. This is a book that shows how Scott challenged conventional assumptions about the permanency of stone and the evanescence of air; it begins with the land and ends by looking at the stars.

    • Provides the first book-length study of Walter Scott's substantial writing about Scotland's ecological and environmental history
    • Comprehensive, thematical study of Scotland's human and nonhuman environmental relationships
    • Utilises ecocritical theory to analyze Scott's writing, situating that work in a wider body of Romantic and contemporary environmental critical studies.

    Reviews & endorsements

    ‘Lucidly written and theoretically informed, this study asserts the vital relationships between literature, social history, and the natural world … Highly recommended.’ E. Kraft, Choice Connect

    ‘Walter Scott and the Greening of Scotland shows that corrections to modernity’s excesses emerged simultaneously within the discourse of modernity, countering a false triumphalist narrative of linear progress toward liberal social economies. In laying the foundation for this kind of reassessment, Oliver has published an important work that scholars will find rewarding for years to come.’ J. Andrew Hubbell, Modern Philology

    ‘The sweep of research on display in this book is breathtaking.’ Alexander Dick, European Romantic Review

    ‘… there is much fascinating material in the book exploring the way Scott uses myth and legend as a way of expressing the “enjoyable magic” of the land.’ Mandy Haggith, Green Letters: Studies in Ecocriticism

    ‘… an ambitious book, in dialogue throughout with recent work on nature and land ethics … [that] lays down an important challenge and an invitation to further studies.’ Kathryn Sutherland, The Times Literary Supplement

    See more reviews

    Product details

    December 2023
    Paperback
    9781108926881
    251 pages
    229 × 152 × 13 mm
    0.37kg
    Available

    Table of Contents

    • 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.
      Author
    • Susan Oliver , University of Essex

      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).