Adrian Tait argues that late-Victorian stories represent an important
but still neglected part of a green literary tradition, setting up a
dialogue with modernity that is no less relevant today. Late-Victorian
literature is full of fascinating examples of what was then called the
“scientific romance,” an emerging form of science or speculative
fiction whose concern with the liveliness – or “agentiality” –
of the nonhuman animal and more-than-human, natural world today makes
it particularly noteworthy. In a succession of short stories and
novels, many now forgotten, writers such as Grant Allen, John
Davidson, George Griffith, and Henry Marriott Watson dramatized the
possibility that “Nature” had not been “conquered” by
industrial modernity, but might instead be reacting to it with an
unexpected dynamism. Long before environmental issues such as climate
change came to the public's attention, they asked whether humankind
might one day inadvertently create existential threats to its own
survival. In so doing, these pioneers of sf depicted their world in
terms that anticipate the recent new materialist focus on a mutable
and dynamic reality, responsive and perhaps resistant to human
endeavor.
Les mer
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781978771611
Publisert
2025
Utgave
1. utgave
Utgiver
Bloomsbury USA
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter