Ecogothic Gardens in the Long Nineteenth Century

Ecogothic Gardens in the Long Nineteenth Century

Phantoms, Fantasy and Uncanny Flowers

Edney, Sue

Manchester University Press

05/2024

240

Mole

9781526178992

Pré-lançamento - envio 15 a 20 dias após a sua edição

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Introduction: Phantoms, fantasy and uncanny flowers - Sue Edney

1 Deadly gardens: The 'Gothic green' in Goethe and Eichendorff - Heather I. Sullivan
2 'Diabolic clouds over everything': An ecoGothic reading of John Ruskin's garden at Brantwood - Caroline Ikin
3 The Gothic orchard of the Victorian imagination - Joanna Crosby
4 Gothic Eden: Gardens, religious tradition and ecoGothic exegesis in Algernon Blackwood's 'The Lost Valley' and 'The Transfer' - Christopher M. Scott
5 'That which roars further out': Gardens and wilderness in 'The Man who Went too Far' by E. F. Benson and 'The Man Whom the Trees Loved' by Algernon Blackwood - Ruth Heholt
6 Darwin's plants and Darwin's gardens: Sex, sensation and natural selection - Jonathan Smith
7 'Tentacular thinking' and the 'abcanny' in Hawthorne's Gothic gardens of masculine egotism - Shelley Saguaro
8 Green is the new black: Plant monsters as ecoGothic tropes; vampires and femme fatales - Teresa Fitzpatrick
9 Death and the fairy: Hidden gardens and the haunting of childhood - Francesca Bihet
10 Presence and absence in Tennyson's gardens of grief: 'Mariana', Maud and Somersby - Sue Edney
11 Blackwater Park and the haunting of Wilkie Collins's The Woman in White - Adrian Tait

Afterword: Z Vesper, the Wilderness Garden, Powis Castle - Paul Evans

Index -- .
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agency; ecocriticism; ecoGothic; ecomaterialism; ecophobia; gardens; ninteenth century; plants; uncanny; vegetal