Table Of ContentVictorian 
Environmental 
Nightmares
Edited by
Laurence W. Mazzeno · Ronald D. Morrison
Victorian Environmental Nightmares
Laurence W. Mazzeno ·  
Ronald D. Morrison 
Editors
Victorian 
Environmental 
Nightmares
Editors
Laurence W. Mazzeno Ronald D. Morrison
Alvernia University Department of English
Reading, PA, USA Morehead State University
Morehead, KY, USA
ISBN 978-3-030-14041-0   ISBN 978-3-030-14042-7  (eBook)
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-14042-7
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A
cknowledgements
Both  editors  wish  to  formally  commend  our  contributors  for  their  
exceptional response to our solicitation for articles, for their cheerful 
responses to our queries, and for their promptness in meeting deadlines.
Laurence  W.  Mazzeno  wishes  to  acknowledge  the  assistance  he 
received  from  the  staff  of  the  Frank  A.  Franco  Library  at  Alvernia 
University,  and  the  staff  of  the  Jefferson  County  Public  Library  in 
Colorado.
Ronald D. Morrison extends his gratitude to the following individuals 
at Morehead State University for negotiating a reduced teaching load to 
support this project: Tom Williams, former Associate Dean of the School 
of  English,  Communication,  Media,  and  Languages;  Layne  Neeper, 
Associate  Dean  of  the  School  of  English,  Communication,  Media, 
and Languages; and John Ernst, Dean of the Caudill College of Arts, 
Humanities, and Social Sciences.
v
c
ontents
1  Introduction: Representing Victorian Environmental 
Nightmares    1
Laurence W. Mazzeno and Ronald D. Morrison
Part I  At Home
2  The Assumption of the Dragon: Ruskin’s Mythic Vision    25
Sara Atwood
3  Elizabeth Barrett Browning’s Failed Pastoral and the 
Environments of the Poor    45
Mary Sanders Pollock
4  Pip’s Nightmare and Orlick’s Dream    61
Allen MacDuffie
Part II  Abroad
5  Frances Trollope’s Domestic Manners of the Americans 
and the EcoGothic    81
Ronald D. Morrison
vii
viii    CoNTENTS
6  James Thomson’s Deserts    101
John Miller
7  “Tragic ring-barked forests” and the “Wicked Wood”: 
Haunting Environmental Anxiety in Late  
Nineteenth-Century Australian Literature    121
Susan K. Martin
8  “Rivers Change Like Nations”: Reading  
Eco-Apocalypse in The Waters of Edera    145
Alicia Carroll
Part III  Imagined Landscapes
9  Disaster and Deserts: Children’s Natural History  
as Nightmare and Dream    167
Naomi Wood
10  Imperial Ecologies and Extinction in H. G. Wells’s 
Island Stories    185
Jade Munslow ong
11  Human Intervention and More-Than-Human  
Humanity in H. G. Wells’s The Island of Doctor Moreau    207
Shun Yin Kiang
12  Nowhere to Go: Caught Between Nature and Culture  
in Oscar Wilde’s Fairy Tales    227
Susan M. Bernardo
13  Ecocrisis and Slow Violence: Anthropocene Readings  
of Late-Victorian Disaster Narratives    243
Mark Frost
Index    263
n    c
otes on ontributors
Sara Atwood’s work has appeared in The Ruskin Review and Bulletin, 
Nineteenth-Century Prose,  The Journal of Pre-Raphaelite Studies,  and 
Carlyle Studies Annual. Her book Ruskin’s Educational Ideals was pub-
lished by Ashgate in 2011. She is a contributor to the Yale University 
Press  edition  of  Carlyle’s  On  Heroes,  Hero  Worship,  and  the  Heroic 
in  History  (2013),  Teaching  Victorian  Literature  in  the  Twenty-First 
Century  (Palgrave,  2017),  and  John Ruskin and Nineteenth-Century 
Education (Anthem Press, 2018). She has lectured widely on Ruskin, 
focusing particularly on education, the environment, and language. She 
is a Companion of the Guild of St. George and editor of its annual jour-
nal, The Companion. Dr. Atwood teaches English literature at Portland 
State University and writing at Portland Community College.
Susan M. Bernardo teaches literary theory, British literature, fairy tales, 
and science fiction at Wagner College, where she is Professor of English. 
At conferences, she has presented on Victorian literature (most recently 
on Edith Nesbit’s short fiction and on oscar Wilde’s fairy tales), science 
fiction, and film. She has co-authored (with Graham Murphy) a book on 
Ursula Le Guin’s works and contributed chapters on Butler’s Parable 
of the Sower and Griffith’s Slow River, Eliot’s Romola, Mary Shelley’s 
Mathilda, and C. J. Cherryh’s Cyteen to various edited volumes. She 
has  edited  a  book  called  Environments  in  Science  Fiction:  Essays  on 
Alternative Spaces (2014), to which she contributed a chapter on Philip 
K. Dick’s Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep? She has also contributed 
ix
x    NoTES oN CoNTRIBUToRS
a chapter to Time Travel Television (editors Sherry Ginn and Gillian 
Leitch, 2015) and to Tim Burton: Essays on the Films (edited by Johnson 
Cheu, 2016). Her next book will focus on Star Trek: Voyager.
Alicia Carroll is Associate Professor of English at Auburn University, 
Auburn, Alabama. She is the author of Dark Smiles: Race and Desire 
in the Works of George Eliot (2003). Her recent work on Victorians and 
the environment has appeared in Green Letters: Studies in Ecocriticism, 
Romantic Ecocriticism: Origins and Legacies, and Victorian Review. She 
has also published extensively on George Eliot.
Mark Frost is Senior Lecturer in English Literature at the University of 
Portsmouth, Portsmouth, UK. He is the author of The Lost Companions 
and John Ruskin’s Guild of St. George: A Revisionary History (2014) 
and  articles  on  Ruskin  in  Victorian Literature and Culture  (2011), 
Nineteenth-Century Prose (2011), Green Letters: Studies in Ecocriticism 
(2011), Journal of Commonwealth Literature (2010), The Eighth Lamp: 
Ruskin Studies Today (2009), and Victorian Writers and the Environment 
(2017). He is also the editor of the new edition of Richard Jefferies’s 
After London (Edinburgh UP, 2017).
Shun Yin Kiang is an Assistant Professor of English at the University 
of Central oklahoma. His research and teaching interests span Victorian 
and Edwardian literature, twentieth- and twenty-first-century British lit-
erature, and contemporary Anglophone fiction, with emphases on the 
novel, postcolonial thought, and ecocriticism. His articles on friendship 
in Edwardian and twentieth-century English fiction appeared in ARIEL 
and Creatural Fictions in 2016. He is currently at work on two pro-
jects: an essay on magical thinking and assemblages as history in Shani 
Mootoo’s fiction, and guest-editing a special issue of The Global South on 
the possibilities of and problems with contextualizing the Anglophone 
novel.
Allen MacDuffie Associate Professor of English at the University of 
Texas at Austin, is the author of Victorian Literature, Energy, and the 
Ecological Imagination (Cambridge University Press, 2014), winner of 
the Sonya Rudikoff Award for the best first scholarly book in the field 
of Victorian Studies. His essays on Victorian fiction and poetry have 
appeared in Representations, ELH, PMLA, and Philological Quarterly, 
and his most recent work, on the television series Breaking Bad and con-
temporary serial narrative, is forthcoming from Cultural Critique.
NoTES oN CoNTRIBUToRS    xi
Susan K. Martin is Professor in English and Associate Pro Vice-Chancellor 
(Research) in the College of Arts, Social Sciences and Commerce, La Trobe 
University, Australia. Her teaching is in Australian studies and Victorian 
culture. She publishes on nineteenth- to twenty-first-century Anglophone 
literature and culture, including cultures of reading, garden history, and 
literature and the environment, in journals including English Studies and 
Studies in The History of Gardens and Designed Landscapes. Her books 
include Reading the Garden with Katie Holmes and Kylie Mirmohamadi 
(2008), Women and Empire (Australia) (2009),  Sensational Melbourne 
(2011), and Colonial Dickens (2012) with Kylie Mirmohamadi. She is cur-
rently working with an interdisciplinary team on a project on national iden-
tity and the teaching of literature in schools in the digital age.
Laurence  W.  Mazzeno president  emeritus  of  Alvernia  University, 
is the author or editor of twenty books on British and American lit-
erary  figures,  including  two  collections  of  essays  co-edited  with  
Ronald D. Morrison, Victorian Writers and the Environment: Ecocritical 
Perspectives and Animals in Victorian Literature and Culture: Contexts 
for Criticism. He has published articles in refereed journals, literary jour-
nalism, and reference articles, reviews, and selected bibliographies. He 
served as academic editor for two editions of Masterplots (14 volumes) 
and has been on the editorial staff of Nineteenth-Century Prose and its 
predecessor journals since 1980.
John Miller is a Senior Lecturer in Nineteenth-Century Literature at the 
University of Sheffield. His books include Empire and the Animal Body 
(Anthem, 2012) and (with Louise Miller) Walrus (Reaktion, 2014). He 
is co-editor of Palgrave Studies in Animals and Literature, co-director 
of ShARC (Sheffield Animal Studies Research Centre) and Deputy Chair 
of ASLE-UKI (Association for Study of Literature and the Environment, 
UK & Ireland). His current book project is a literary history of fur.
Ronald D. Morrison is Professor of English at Morehead State University. 
He is co-editor, with Laurence W. Mazzeno, of Victorian Writers and the 
Environment: Ecocritical Perspectives (Routledge, 2016) and Animals in 
Victorian Literature and Culture: Contexts for Criticism (Palgrave, 2017). 
He has published essays on a range of nineteenth-century authors, includ-
ing Hardy, Dickens, Christina Rossetti, and Wordsworth, among others. 
He is currently writing a volume on Hardy’s novels for MacFarland’s new 
companion series on nineteenth-century authors.