Sanditon without a Summer
To be familiar with Jane Austen’s reception history is to also be familiar with her work being frequently characterised as preoccupied with the minor and the inconsequential. This article asks how we might read Austen’s concern with the microhistorical alongside the Anthropocene. Focusing on Sandito...
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Published in | Romanticism (Edinburgh) Vol. 29; no. 2; pp. 188 - 198 |
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Main Author | |
Format | Journal Article |
Language | English |
Published |
UK
Edinburgh University Press
01.07.2023
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Subjects | |
Online Access | Get full text |
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Summary: | To be familiar with Jane Austen’s reception history is to also be familiar with her work being frequently characterised as preoccupied with the minor and the inconsequential. This article asks how we might read Austen’s concern with the microhistorical alongside the Anthropocene. Focusing on
Sanditon
, a fragment with a close relationship to temporal discontinuity, this article responds to the macro/micro bifurcation of Anthropocene time by examining
Sanditon
, first, in relation to the volcanically induced climate change that occurred in its immediate context, and second, in the dark light of the Anthropocene. To read
Sanditon
as an ‘Austenocene’ text, hurtling towards catastrophe, reflects, like a carnival mirror, Austen’s own retrospective anticipation of 1816’s climatological disaster.
Sanditon
, ending when it is still beginning, invites anticipatory and exploratory readings. It is a fragment and a farce that yokes economic and geopolitical history with climatological history. It is a novel of ‘eighteen-hundred and froze to death’ and of the Anthropocene. |
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ISSN: | 1354-991X 1750-0192 |
DOI: | 10.3366/rom.2023.0599 |