Environmental Justice in Early Victorian Literature

£39.99

Environmental Justice in Early Victorian Literature

Literary studies: c 1800 to c 1900 Literary studies: fiction, novelists and prose writers Environmental factors Environmentalist thought and ideology Social impact of environmental issues

Author: Adrian Tait

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Collection: Routledge Studies in Environmental Justice

Language: English

Published by: Routledge

Published on: 30 August 2023

Format: LCP-protected ePub

ISBN: 9781000923124


This innovative new book combines environmental justice scholarship with a material ecocriticism to explore the way in which early Victorian literature (1837–1860) responded to the growing problem of environmental injustice.

As this book emphasises, environmental injustice – simply, the convergence of poverty and pollution – was not an isolated phenomenon, but a structural form of inequality; a product of industrial modernity’s radical reformation of British society, it particularly affected the working classes. As each chapter reveals in detail, this form of environmental inequality (or classism) drew sharply critical reactions from figures as diverse as Thomas Carlyle, Friedrich Engels, Charles Dickens, and John Ruskin, and from within the Chartist movement, as working-class writers themselves reacted to the hazardous realities of a divided society. But as this book also reveals, these writers recognised that a truly just society respects the needs of the nonhuman and takes account of the material world in all its own aliveness; even if only tentatively, they reached for a more inclusive, emergent form of justice that might address the social and ecological impacts of industrial modernity, an idea which is no less relevant today.

This book represents an indispensable resource for scholars and students working in the fields of Victorian literature, environmental justice, and ecocriticism.

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