John Cowper Powys and the Afterlife of Romanticism

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A01=Kim Wheatley
animate
Author_Kim Wheatley
British literature
Category=DSBH
Category=DSK
disability studies
eco-criticism
ecology
environment
eq_bestseller
eq_biography-true-stories
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
forthcoming
inanimate
John Cowper Powys
John Keats
literary influences
literary legacies
Modernism
nature
novel
periodicity
periodization
reception studies
Romanticism
supernatural
transcendentalism
twentieth-century literature
welsh literature
William Wordsworth

Product details

  • ISBN 9798765119433
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 20 Aug 2026
  • Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing Plc
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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This study bridges the chronological divide between the Romantic era and the first six decades of the 20th century, interpreting John Cowper Powys (18721963) as a major, under-recognized contributor to the cultural transmission of Romanticism.

Kim Wheatley’s John Cowper Powys and the Afterlife of Romanticism uncovers the surprising extent to which this multi-faceted Modernist-era author reworked key concerns of the Romantic poets. Wheatley shows how Powys’s prose rewritings of Romantic poetry contribute to the story of the posthumous life of Romanticism, especially its environmental legacy. In particular, the book expands our understanding of the early 20th-century reception of William Wordsworth and John Keats.

Wheatley argues that Powys anticipates and presciently interrogates recent revisionary critical approaches to the Romantics, primarily materialist eco-critical approaches, and therefore invites a fresh environmentalist criticism open to the transcendental and the supernatural. Chapters range across Powys’s extensive oeuvre, investigating his treatment of Wordsworth and Keats in his works of fiction, autobiographical writings, popular philosophical books, and essays of literary appreciation, including his Autobiography (1934), his four major Wessex novels – Wolf Solent (1929), A Glastonbury Romance (1932), Weymouth Sands (1934), and Maiden Castle (1936) – and his later Welsh historical novels Owen Glendower (1941) and Porius (1951). Wheatley demonstrates how Powys uniquely combines sense-based nature-worship, the leveling of animate and inanimate, and care for disabled human beings, along with mystical and magical themes, into an all-encompassing ecological vision more capacious than any imagined by the Romantics themselves.

Kim Wheatley is Professor of English at William & Mary, USA, specializing in British Romanticism. Her previous books include Shelley and His Readers (1999) and Romantic Feuds (2013).

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