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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Chris WashingtonPublisher: University of Toronto Press Imprint: University of Toronto Press Dimensions: Width: 16.00cm , Height: 2.50cm , Length: 23.50cm Weight: 0.520kg ISBN: 9781487504502ISBN 10: 1487504500 Pages: 277 Publication Date: 22 September 2019 Audience: College/higher education , Professional and scholarly , Tertiary & Higher Education , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Temporarily unavailable ![]() The supplier advises that this item is temporarily unavailable. It will be ordered for you and placed on backorder. Once it does come back in stock, we will ship it out to you. Table of ContentsAcknowledgments Introduction: There Is a Light That Never Goes Out? 1. The Mind Is Its Own Place: What Percy Shelley's Mountain Did Not Say 2. No More Cakes and Ale, Only Oil Slicks: Mary Shelley’s Post-Apocalyptic State of Nature 3. Byron’s Speculative Turn: The Biopolitics of Paradise 4. Birds Do It, Bees Do It: John Clare, Biopolitics, and the Nonhuman Origins of Love 5. The Best of All Possible End of the Worlds: Jane Austen’s Frankenstein, or Love in the Ruins Coda: After Extinctualism: Hope for Life Notes Bibliography IndexReviewsWashington's richly suggestive book is a timely and useful polemic for all those working in Romantic studies who value the period as an age of revolution and institutional change. In postapocalyptic constructions of hope and love, Romanticism finds new resonance in our own age of climate crisis. Even amidst the so-called sixth extinction, Washington makes the case that there is ample space and time to defamiliarize 'the thing with feathers' and the 'ever-fixed mark.' Washington's call for a new social contract that thinks beyond narrow species categories is a welcome reminder that this cohort of two-hundred-year-old Romantic reformers is still changing the world. -- Fuson Wang, University of California, Riverside * <em>Journal of British Studies</em> * """Washington’s richly suggestive book is a timely and useful polemic for all those working in Romantic studies who value the period as an age of revolution and institutional change. In postapocalyptic constructions of hope and love, Romanticism finds new resonance in our own age of climate crisis. Even amidst the so-called sixth extinction, Washington makes the case that there is ample space and time to defamiliarize ‘the thing with feathers’ and the ‘ever-fixed mark.’ Washington’s call for a new social contract that thinks beyond narrow species categories is a welcome reminder that this cohort of two-hundred-year-old Romantic reformers is still changing the world."" -- Fuson Wang, University of California, Riverside * <em>Journal of British Studies</em> * ""The philosophically speculative twist Washington brings to bear on what are undoubtedly, unavoidably acute, searing political challenges makes this a book for our times. As we exit the Anthropocene, hopefully with grace rather than blindness and resentment, to paraphrase John Ricco, we are compelled, as Washington suggests, to understand ‘the world on its own terms.’ Seems damn-near impossible to me. But Washington gives me hope that this can be done with hope, and love, and that an emerging generation of Romantics scholars among whom he counts himself might just pull it off."" -- Joel Faflak, University of Western Ontario * <em>Romantic Circles</em> *" Author InformationChris Washington is Assistant Professor of English at Francis Marion University. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |