Article ID: CBB719406434

Animal and Social Ecologies in Anne Brontë's Agnes Grey (2020)

unapi

In Anne Brontë's Agnes Grey (1847), the eponymous narrator uses a range of ecological metaphors to make sense of her interactions with others. She likens governessing to domestic horticulture and envisions how her task of educating children will be “to train the tender plants, and watch their buds unfolding day by day.” Rather than voice her unfulfilled romantic feelings for Weston or consciously work through her self-doubts about physical appearance, she visualizes them both as insects: she is the “humble glow-worm” who, without a “power of giving light” (i.e., beauty), “the roving fly might pass her . . . a thousand times, and never light beside her” (123). Even the reader, in the opening sentence, assumes the role of active participant: a nucivorous beast hunting for whatever “dry, shriveled kernel” of narrative meaning might be found by “cracking the nut” (5). As character, the budding naturalist “botanize[s] and entomologize[s] along the green banks and budding hedges”; as narrator, she projects herself and those around her into complex ecosystems (95). Her choice of metaphors captures a matrix of exchanges in which species of all kinds interact with one another and their environments in unpredictable ways. Agnes assigns the life cycles of flora and fauna to characters, populating the novel with human and nonhuman animals in ways that draw heavily on early nineteenth-century science even as they also prefigure some of the concerns of contemporary animal studies and ecocriticism.

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Authors & Contributors
Voskuil, Lynn
LaBouff, Nicole
Karnicky, Jeff
Harrington, Christopher
Smith, Elise Lawton
Page, Judith W
Journals
Victorian Literature and Culture
Science in Context
History of Science
Archives of Natural History
19: Interdisciplinary Studies in the Long Nineteenth Century
Publishers
Cambridge University Press
Yale University Press
University of Virginia Press
University of Pittsburgh Press
University of Nebraska Press
University of Michigan Press
Concepts
Botany
Horticulture
Science and literature
Science and culture
Gardens
Economic botany; plant cultivation; horticulture
People
Wells, Herbert George
Hume, Amelia
Barrington, Jane
Watson-Wentworth, Mary
Van Rensselaer, Schuyler, Mrs.
Brontë, Charlotte
Time Periods
19th century
18th century
20th century, early
21st century
20th century
17th century
Places
Great Britain
United States
Guyana; British Guiana
England
Amazon River Region (South America)
Scotland
Institutions
Royal Society of London
Great Britain. Royal Navy
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