Early Anthropocene Literature in Britain, 1750–1884 by Seth T. Reno, and: Charlotte Brontë at the Anthropocene by Shawna Ross (review)

IF 0.2 3区 社会学 0 HUMANITIES, MULTIDISCIPLINARY
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Among them are preserving historical specificity while tracking transhistorical continuities, scaling between competing forms and forces (as well as levels of reading), and theorizing human species-being without obfuscating intrahuman difference and uneven landscapes of exposure. The two monographs reviewed here are organized around a common set of concerns: the relationship between anthropogenic enterprise and geologic process as emergent in the long nineteenth century, the affordances of aesthetic representation in confrontation with the so-called Anthropocene, and problems of literary history. Their scalar approaches, however, are quite different. Whereas Seth T. Reno's Early Anthropocene Literature in Britain, 1750–1884 cuts across more than a century's worth of aesthetic and scientific cultural production, Shawna Ross's Charlotte Brontë at the Anthropocene centers the oeuvre of one woman writing in a particular place and time. Considered together, these monographs throw into relief some of the possibilities and pitfalls of ecocritical nineteenth-century studies. Reno's Early Anthropocene Literature in Britain takes as its point of focus the \"Romantic Century,\" the bookends of which are the onset of the Industrial Revolution and John Ruskin's 1884 storm-cloud lectures. Eschewing the bounds of periodization, [End Page 357] Reno emphasizes transhistorical porosity. He does so to \"advocate for 1750 as a convenient starting date for the Anthropocene\": it encompasses the rise of industry, agriculture, and commerce in \"the global fossil fuel era\"; marks \"a clear rise in CO2\"; and reveals how \"the eighteenth century is the first time that writers recognized humanity as a geological force of nature\" (4). Whereas, according to Reno, \"most literary studies of the Anthropocene … argu[e] that recognition of anthropogenic climate change does not emerge until the twentieth century,\" Early Anthropocene Literature in Britain \"proposes a novel framework built on the substrate of little-noticed\" eighteenth- and nineteenth-century \"acknowledgments of climate change\" (7). In the project's expansive archive, Reno locates \"a tension between humans as powerful geological agents and humans as insignificant in the vast immensity of deep time and deep space,\" a tension that he argues is constitutive of the Anthropocene (11). Taking shape across four chapters whose elemental structure (earth, fire, water, air) proceeds from Erasmus Darwin's The Botanic Garden (1791), Early Anthropocene Literature in Britain surveys a wide range of writings that self-consciously chronicle \"the Industrial Revolution as the start of a new geological epoch\" (47). Early Anthropocene Literature in Britain surveys an incredibly rich archive and observes numerous connections between anthropogenic enterprise and geophysical processes. But much of what the book claims as argumentatively or methodologically novel tends to echo existing scholarship. Some of this may come down to audience, for the readers addressed in Early Anthropocene Literature in Britain are presumed not to have followed recent developments in eighteenth- and nineteenth-century ecostudies. If, however, it is indeed the case that \"popular opinion\" or the established scholarly \"Grand Narrative\" tends to locate self-conscious \"recognition\" of humankind's geophysical power in the twentieth century, as Reno claims, scholars in the fields of eighteenth- and nineteenth-century studies have been arguing otherwise for some time now (viii, 7). Despite briefly acknowledging the flatness of the Anthropocene concept and the trouble with claiming golden spikes—geohistorical markers around which contemporary debates about the origination of our new post-Holocene epoch are organized—the book nevertheless stakes out a self-admittedly \"convenient\" and (to scholars in the field) familiar one: 1750 (4). In the process, key historical, cultural, conceptual, and aesthetic distinctions tend to slip away. 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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Reviewed by: Early Anthropocene Literature in Britain, 1750–1884 by Seth T. Reno, and: Charlotte Brontë at the Anthropocene by Shawna Ross Devin M. Garofalo (bio) Early Anthropocene Literature in Britain, 1750–1884, by Seth T. Reno; pp. xvi + 246. London and New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2020, $119.99, $119.99 paper. Charlotte Brontë at the Anthropocene, by Shawna Ross; pp. vii + 326. Albany: SUNY Press, 2020, $95.00, $24.95 paper. For scholars of nineteenth-century British literature and the environmental humanities, the Anthropocene concept poses a number of pressing challenges. Among them are preserving historical specificity while tracking transhistorical continuities, scaling between competing forms and forces (as well as levels of reading), and theorizing human species-being without obfuscating intrahuman difference and uneven landscapes of exposure. The two monographs reviewed here are organized around a common set of concerns: the relationship between anthropogenic enterprise and geologic process as emergent in the long nineteenth century, the affordances of aesthetic representation in confrontation with the so-called Anthropocene, and problems of literary history. Their scalar approaches, however, are quite different. Whereas Seth T. Reno's Early Anthropocene Literature in Britain, 1750–1884 cuts across more than a century's worth of aesthetic and scientific cultural production, Shawna Ross's Charlotte Brontë at the Anthropocene centers the oeuvre of one woman writing in a particular place and time. Considered together, these monographs throw into relief some of the possibilities and pitfalls of ecocritical nineteenth-century studies. Reno's Early Anthropocene Literature in Britain takes as its point of focus the "Romantic Century," the bookends of which are the onset of the Industrial Revolution and John Ruskin's 1884 storm-cloud lectures. Eschewing the bounds of periodization, [End Page 357] Reno emphasizes transhistorical porosity. He does so to "advocate for 1750 as a convenient starting date for the Anthropocene": it encompasses the rise of industry, agriculture, and commerce in "the global fossil fuel era"; marks "a clear rise in CO2"; and reveals how "the eighteenth century is the first time that writers recognized humanity as a geological force of nature" (4). Whereas, according to Reno, "most literary studies of the Anthropocene … argu[e] that recognition of anthropogenic climate change does not emerge until the twentieth century," Early Anthropocene Literature in Britain "proposes a novel framework built on the substrate of little-noticed" eighteenth- and nineteenth-century "acknowledgments of climate change" (7). In the project's expansive archive, Reno locates "a tension between humans as powerful geological agents and humans as insignificant in the vast immensity of deep time and deep space," a tension that he argues is constitutive of the Anthropocene (11). Taking shape across four chapters whose elemental structure (earth, fire, water, air) proceeds from Erasmus Darwin's The Botanic Garden (1791), Early Anthropocene Literature in Britain surveys a wide range of writings that self-consciously chronicle "the Industrial Revolution as the start of a new geological epoch" (47). Early Anthropocene Literature in Britain surveys an incredibly rich archive and observes numerous connections between anthropogenic enterprise and geophysical processes. But much of what the book claims as argumentatively or methodologically novel tends to echo existing scholarship. Some of this may come down to audience, for the readers addressed in Early Anthropocene Literature in Britain are presumed not to have followed recent developments in eighteenth- and nineteenth-century ecostudies. If, however, it is indeed the case that "popular opinion" or the established scholarly "Grand Narrative" tends to locate self-conscious "recognition" of humankind's geophysical power in the twentieth century, as Reno claims, scholars in the fields of eighteenth- and nineteenth-century studies have been arguing otherwise for some time now (viii, 7). Despite briefly acknowledging the flatness of the Anthropocene concept and the trouble with claiming golden spikes—geohistorical markers around which contemporary debates about the origination of our new post-Holocene epoch are organized—the book nevertheless stakes out a self-admittedly "convenient" and (to scholars in the field) familiar one: 1750 (4). In the process, key historical, cultural, conceptual, and aesthetic distinctions tend to slip away. All texts become uniform instances of the "links" (a word the book leans on heavily) between geologic process and anthropogenic enterprise that...
英国早期人类世文学,1750-1884,作者:塞思·t·雷诺和:夏洛特Brontë人类世作者:肖娜·罗斯(评论)
书评:英国早期人类世文学,1750-1884年,塞思·t·里诺;夏洛特Brontë在人类世,肖娜·罗斯·德文·m·加罗法洛(传记)英国早期人类世文学,1750-1884年,塞思·t·里诺;第16 + 246页。伦敦和纽约:Palgrave Macmillan出版社,2020年版,119.99美元,纸质版119.99美元。夏洛特Brontë在人类世,作者肖娜·罗斯;页7 + 326。奥尔巴尼:纽约州立大学出版社,2020年,95美元,纸质版24.95美元。对于19世纪英国文学和环境人文学科的学者来说,人类世的概念提出了许多紧迫的挑战。其中包括在追踪跨历史连续性的同时保留历史特殊性,在竞争形式和力量(以及阅读水平)之间进行缩放,在不混淆人与人之间差异和不均匀的暴露景观的情况下理论化人类物种存在。这里回顾的两篇专著围绕着一系列共同的问题进行组织:在漫长的19世纪出现的人类活动与地质过程之间的关系,与所谓的人类世对抗的美学表现的优势,以及文学史的问题。然而,它们的标量方法却大不相同。Seth T. Reno的《英国早期人类世文学,1750-1884》跨越了一个多世纪的美学和科学文化作品,Shawna Ross的《夏洛特Brontë人类世》集中了一位女性在特定地点和时间的全部作品。综合考虑,这些专著揭示了19世纪生态批评研究的一些可能性和陷阱。雷诺的《英国早期人类世文学》以“浪漫世纪”为焦点,其中工业革命的开始和约翰·罗斯金1884年的风暴云讲座是这一世纪的起点。Reno避开了分期的界限,强调了跨历史的孔隙度。他这样做是为了“倡导把1750年作为人类世的起始日期”:它涵盖了“全球化石燃料时代”工业、农业和商业的兴起;标志着“二氧化碳的明显上升”;并揭示了“18世纪是作家们第一次认识到人类是一种自然的地质力量”(4)。然而,根据雷诺的说法,“大多数关于人类世的文学研究……都认为,直到20世纪才出现了对人为气候变化的认识。”英国早期人类世文学“提出了一个新框架,它建立在18世纪和19世纪鲜为人知的“对气候变化的认识”的基础上(7)。在该项目庞大的档案中,里诺发现了“人类作为强大的地质媒介与人类在浩瀚的深时空中无足轻重之间的紧张关系”,他认为这种紧张关系构成了人类世(11)。《英国早期人类世文学》分为四章,其基本结构(土、火、水、空气)源自伊拉斯谟·达尔文的《植物园》(1791)。该书调查了大量自觉地将“工业革命作为一个新地质时代的开端”编年史的著作。《英国早期人类世文学》调查了极其丰富的档案,并观察了人类活动与地球物理过程之间的许多联系。但这本书在论证或方法论上的许多新颖之处,往往与现有的学术研究相呼应。其中一些可能归结于读者,因为《英国早期人类世文学》一书的读者被认为没有跟上18世纪和19世纪生态研究的最新发展。然而,如果“大众观点”或已确立的学术“大叙述”确实像雷诺所说的那样,倾向于把对人类地球物理力量的自觉“承认”定位在20世纪,那么18世纪和19世纪研究领域的学者们一段时间以来一直在争论另一种观点。尽管简要地承认了人类世概念的平面化,以及宣称“黄金尖峰”——当代关于我们新的后全新世时代起源的争论围绕着这个地理历史标志——的麻烦,这本书还是提出了一个自认为“方便”的(对该领域的学者来说)熟悉的:1750年(4)。在这个过程中,关键的历史、文化、概念和美学的区别往往会消失。所有的文本都成为地质过程和人类活动之间的“联系”(本书大量使用的一个词)的统一实例。
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来源期刊
VICTORIAN STUDIES
VICTORIAN STUDIES HUMANITIES, MULTIDISCIPLINARY-
CiteScore
0.90
自引率
9.10%
发文量
0
期刊介绍: For more than 50 years, Victorian Studies has been devoted to the study of British culture of the Victorian age. It regularly includes interdisciplinary articles on comparative literature, social and political history, and the histories of education, philosophy, fine arts, economics, law and science, as well as review essays, and an extensive book review section. An annual cumulative and fully searchable bibliography of noteworthy publications that have a bearing on the Victorian period is available electronically and is included in the cost of a subscription. Victorian Studies Online Bibliography
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