Cantitate/Preț
Produs

Action without Hope: Victorian Literature after Climate Collapse

Autor Nathan K. Hensley
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 4 iun 2025

Apreciem la Action without Hope aplicabilitatea sa imediată în studiile critice contemporane, oferind un instrumentar teoretic pentru a înțelege cum literatura poate articula acțiunea într-un moment de paralizie sistemică. Autorul Nathan K. Hensley pornește de la premisa că sentimentul actual de neputință în fața dezastrului climatic are o preistorie documentată în literatura secolului al XIX-lea. Descoperim aici o analiză minuțioasă a modului în care scriitorii victorieni, confruntați cu o economie a carbonului aflată în plină expansiune, au mutat accentul de la soluții eroice către ceea ce Hensley numește „tehnologii estetice” — sonetul, schița în acuarelă sau romanul cu planuri multiple.

Suntem de părere că această lucrare extinde cadrul propus de Weak Planet de Wai Chee Dimock cu date noi din perioada victoriană, ambele volume identificând speranța nu în gesturi spectaculoase, ci în munca de echipă nespectaculoasă și în înrudirea cu lumea non-umană. În timp ce Weak Planet se concentrează pe vulnerabilitate ca stare universală, Action without Hope investighează specific cum forma literară — de la fragmentele onirice ale lui Emily Brontë la detaliile din romanele lui George Eliot — devine un spațiu de rezistență.

Lucrarea se poziționează ca o continuare firească a preocupărilor lui Hensley pentru intersecția dintre politică, violență și formă, teme explorate anterior în Forms of Empire. Dacă în volumul precedent autorul analiza relația statului modern cu violența, aici el rafinează această perspectivă prin lentila ecocriticismului, temă abordată și în antologia Ecological Form – System and Aesthetics in the Age of Empire. Stilul este unul academic riguros, dar revigorant, transformând o temă sumbră într-o explorare fascinantă a resurselor estetice umane.

Citește tot Restrânge

Preț: 23470 lei

Puncte Express: 352

Carte disponibilă

Livrare economică 05-19 mai
Livrare express 21-25 aprilie pentru 3245 lei


Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780226838069
ISBN-10: 0226838064
Pagini: 352
Ilustrații: 8 color plates, 34 halftones, 1 tables
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 23 mm
Greutate: 0.54 kg
Ediția:First Edition
Editura: University of Chicago Press
Colecția University of Chicago Press

De ce să citești această carte

Recomandăm această carte cercetătorilor și studenților din domeniul umanioarelor de mediu și al literaturii victoriene. Cititorul câștigă o înțelegere profundă a modului în care arta poate genera „acțiune fără speranță”, oferind o alternativă la optimismul naiv sau la disperarea paralizantă. Este un studiu esențial despre cum detaliul estetic și gestul minor pot redefini implicarea noastră într-o lume aflată în pragul colapsului.


Despre autor

Nathan K. Hensley este profesor asociat de engleză la Universitatea Georgetown, specializat în literatură victoriană, teorie critică și umanioare de mediu. Opera sa explorează frecvent modul în care formele literare răspund presiunilor istorice și politice. Lucrarea sa anterioară, Forms of Empire, a fost premiată pentru modul în care a reevaluat violența epocii victoriene. În Action without Hope, publicată de University of Chicago Press, el își continuă cercetarea asupra sistemelor imperiale și ecologice, fiind considerat unul dintre cei mai inovatori gânditori ai curentului ecocritic contemporan.


Descriere scurtă

A study of how writers from the early phases of our prolonged climate emergency used aesthetic strategies to redefine the category of action.

What does it feel like to live helplessly in a world that is coming undone? Nathan Hensley turns to Victorian literature to uncover a prehistory of this deeply contemporary sense of powerlessness. For many in nineteenth-century Britain, their world seemed so scarred by human rapacity that restoring it seemed beyond the powers of any one individual. Like George Eliot’s characters in Middlemarch or the doomed lovers of Wuthering Heights, observers of the gathering carbon economy felt themselves ensnared by interlocked and broken systems. In the face of damage so vast and apparently irreversible, what could possibly be done?

To answer this question, Hensley shows that nineteenth-century writers and artists devised new ways to understand action—and hope. They rescaled action away from the grandly heroic and toward minor adjustments and collaborative interventions. They turned away from logical proofs and direct argumentation and instead called on aesthetic technologies like sonnets and fractured lyrics, watercolor sketches, and vast, multiplot novels, finding scope for action not at the level of the theme or the thesis but in gestures and details. Ranging from J. M. W. Turner’s painterly technique to Emily Brontë’s dreamlike fragments (and reading along the way works by Alfred, Lord Tennyson, H. G. Wells, Lewis Carroll, Gerard Manley Hopkins, William Berryman, Charlotte Brontë, George Eliot, and Christina Rossetti), Hensley’s study makes an important contribution to Victorian studies and the environmental humanities.

Notă biografică

Nathan K. Hensley is professor of English at Georgetown University. He is the author of Forms of Empire: The Poetics of Victorian Sovereignty and coeditor, with Philip Steer, of Ecological Form: System and Aesthetics in the Age of Empire. He was born in Fresno, California, and lives in Silver Spring, Maryland.

Recenzii

"I have finally found a critical holy grail in Nathan Hensley’s stunning Action without Hope. Through close readings of Emily Brontë, George Eliot, and others, the book challenges its readers to immerse themselves in the 'fossil-fueled lifeworld' of the nineteenth century. But just as we might acclimate to one line in a late poem by Christina Rossetti, Hensley wrenches us back into the futility of present 'solutionist' rhetorics of individual actions aimed at '"beating" mass extinction'. While extremely generous in its engagement with theorists and critics of all stripes, the meat of this book is Hensley’s relentless pursuit of the ground zero of the texts themselves."

“Hensley’s Action Without Hope intervenes forcefully in Victorian studies and the environmental humanities by arguing that nineteenth-century texts register the contradictions of extractive modernity not through grand thematic pronouncements but through minute formal disturbances. . . . What Hensley offers—brilliantly—is a theory of Victorian form attuned to rupture, damage, and the tiny events in which the limits of capitalist modernity become legible.”

"Famously, poetry makes nothing happen—nor should we expect it to, according to Action without Hope: poetry is not responsible for fixing a broken world. Nathan K. Hensley nonetheless beautifully elaborates how much nineteenth-century poems, novels, and paintings can do within their narrow compass. This book is committed to an ethics of restraint, as a standard of attention to the technical details of artistic forms, but also a proportionate response to outsized disaster."

"Hensley is conversant with such a range of idioms, moves so deftly between them, that he begins to articulate--or rather perform--a multi-voiced analysis that--and I can't quite figure out how he does it-—sustains the resistant language and the dominant at once to create what is almost a third form, mobilizing power when it is needed but in the end against itself to create another possibility for academics. . . . This is a beautiful, breathtaking book that is also an invitation to solidarity in this moment of climate precarity."
 

“Hensley argues, largely from a Marxist viewpoint, that any hope that a reversal of climate disaster will succeed within the ‘extractive order’ of corporate capitalism is unrealistic. Action without Hope claims that we cannot expect large-scale change, but we can anticipate ‘elaboration at small scale' . . . . Recommended.”

“Ambitious in its critical and theoretical range, Action without Hope turns to an archive of major Victorian texts to address the ecological crises that we witness today. Hensley argues that the extractive capitalist social organization leading to our present crisis has been in development since the industrial era and shows how the literary archive challenges common ideas about feeling and agency in relation to ecological disaster. Action without Hope is a bracing, deeply researched book that supercharges a vibrant scholarly conversation.”

“I was on the edge of my seat as I read Action without Hope. Hensley is such a magnificent stylist and invigorating thinker that reading his work is an exhilarating experience despite the difficult topics he explores. Action without Hope exposes a nineteenth-century literary record of despoliation, exploitation, and rapine, but the saving grace of Hensley’s account is the authors themselves—visionaries who saw dark, Satanic mills multiplying around them and improvised various strategies of writerly opposition. Many of these authors are women, and the book’s exquisite close readings of the work of writers like Emily Brontë, George Eliot, and Christina Rossetti challenge masculinist conceptions of action and put forth other modes of response to environmental destruction, modes from which we might learn today. Eagerly anticipated on the strength of Hensley’s earlier work, Action without Hope is a worthy successor to Forms of Empire and Ecological Form. The ambitious range of its arguments and methods mean that its effects will be felt on many different fronts and in many different registers, impacting not just discussions of the authors and texts that Hensley treats, but also the methods and styles of argument that we use in literary studies.”