The Ecology of British and American Empire Writing, 1704 1894
By (Author) Louis Kirk McAuley
Edinburgh University Press
Edinburgh University Press
10th March 2026
United Kingdom
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Literary studies: c 1800 to c 1900
Literary studies: fiction, novelists and prose writers
Paperback
320
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
At this critical juncture in which the biodiversity of planet Earth appears to be shrinking fast and furiously, Louis Kirk McAuley invites us to consider the ways in which particular unruly natures, including animals, plants and minerals, actively intervene in literature to decentre the human. Drawing upon invasion biology, McAuley offers transformative ecocritical interpretations of eighteenth- and nineteenth-century British and American literature and highlights the heterarchical nature of empire building. This includes analyses of texts composed by (or about) persons residing at, or just outside, the edges of the British and American Empires, including St Kitts and Nevis, Haiti, Cuba, Hawaii and Samoa, which were built around the global transfer of animals and plants. Offering biotic readings of this literature, McAuley highlights the human place in nature and provides practical literary examples of the ways oceans facilitate the confusion of time and place.
A remarkable book. This fantastically eloquent and erudite study of empire writing offers an unrivalled account of the cultural registration of 'unruly natures' and their simultaneous contribution to, and troubling of, the imperial expansion of Britain and the US. McAuley's work represents a signal intervention into the Environmental Humanities.
--Michael Niblett, University of WarwickDr Louis Kirk McAuley has been Associate Professor in the Department of English at Washington State University, USA, since 2014. He has published a number of articles and book chapters, as well as his first book Print Technology in Scotland and America, 1740 1800 (Bucknell University Press, 2013).