Nature and the Environment in Nineteenth-Century Ireland
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Liverpool University Press
Published:1st Aug '22
Should be back in stock very soon
The environmental humanities are one of the most exciting and rapidly expanding areas of interdisciplinary study, and this collection of essays is a pioneering attempt to apply these approaches to the study of nineteenth-century Ireland. By bringing together historians, geographers and literary scholars, new insights are offered into familiar subjects and unfamiliar subjects are brought out into the light. Essays re-considering O’Connellism, Lord Palmerston and Isaac Butt rub shoulders with examinations of agricultural improvement, Dublin’s animal geographies and Ireland’s healing places. Literary writers like Emily Lawless and Seumas O’Sullivan are looked at anew, encouraging us to re-think Darwinian influences in Ireland and the history of the Irish literary revival, and transnational perspectives are brought to bear on Ireland’s national park history and the dynamics of Irish natural history. Much modern Irish history is concerned with access to natural resources, whether this reflects the catastrophic effect of the Great Famine or the conflicts associated with agrarian politics, but historical and literary analyses are rarely framed explicitly in these terms. The collection responds to the ‘material turn’ in the humanities and contemporary concern about the environment by re-imagining Ireland’s nineteenth century in fresh and original ways.
List of contributors: Matthew Kelly, Helen O’Connell, David Brown, Colin W. Reid, Huston Gilmore, Ronan Foley, Juliana Adelman, Mary Orr, Patrick Maume and Seán Hewitt.
Reviews ‘A valuable and timely collection.'
Paul Warde, University of Cambridge
'The originality and the excellence of this book reside precisely in the diversity of the fields investigated by the contributors who, in their individual areas of research, show how nineteenth-century Irish history and literature can be reassessed and better understood when the issue of the environment becomes the central critical focus.'
Marie Mianowski, Estudios Irlandeses
‘Overall, this coherent volume demonstrates how Irish environmental humanities continues to cultivate unique and complementary scholarship.’
Justin Dolan Stover, Irish Historical Studies
'Matthew Kelly has done an admirable job both in selecting high-quality essays and in assembling them into a coherent structure. His engaging introduction performs some heavy lifting, deftly summarizingecocritical theory and Irish environmental history scholarship... Victorianists looking for an overview of Irish environmental scholarship, Kelly’s introduction will prove an invaluable read.'
Siobhan Carroll, Victorian Studies
ISBN: 9781802076929
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: unknown
248 pages