We owe much of our present-day understanding of the emotions to the Victorians and the remarkable self-scrutiny that they exercised in seeking to understand the nature and source of emotions. The Scottish philosopher, Alexander Bain, captures the dynamism of this field of study when, in a preface to the second edition of his The Emotions and the Will (1865), he notes that he has “recast” his chapter on emotion, further commenting that “the deriving of emotion from sensation, according to general laws of the mind, has rendered it possible to define and classify the emotions more precisely.”Footnote 1
Victorian emotions were as diverse and complicated as our own, and as Rachel Ablow has helpfully remarked, “the emotions continued to function as a central epistemological tool throughout the era,” defining boundaries, justifying exclusions, accounting for taste, and driving change.Footnote 2 At times Victorian emotions can seem remote, a difference that Jenny Hartley captures superbly when she discusses her students’ negative reactions to sentimental Dickensian prose and the transformative experience of reading the words aloud, as a Victorian reader would have done.Footnote 3 Words that seemed mawkish on the page became vivid with feeling and offer important insights into how we might understand what the emotions theorist Monique Scheer has termed “emotions as practice.”Footnote 4 Hartley's example demonstrates that Victorian emotions can be retrieved and understood, and that doing so can offer valuable insights into the period's literature, culture, and society. Furthermore, we can deepen our understanding of the nineteenth-century emotional landscape by seeking to understand emotional impulses that spurred the Victorians to action.
One understudied aspect of Victorian emotional life is the society's affective attitudes towards a swiftly changing and expanding environment. Writing about environmental change is, whether we like it or not, an emotional process, just as it was for the Victorians. Today, the use of the word “environment” often signals concerns surrounding the destruction of the natural world, extinction, and climate change, although for the Victorians the term was more capacious, with its usage extending to “surroundings” of any kind, rather than specifically rural spaces. The Victorians were deeply aware of accelerating ecological change, in terms of the impact of industrialism on the world around them, as well as through travel, which—as it became easier—opened up new and fascinating places to explore and inhabit.
Writing in 2011, John Parham, who has been a leading figure in Victorian ecocriticism, laid out four important reasons for studying Victorian ecology. Parham notes that while Romanticists have been quick to engage with the possibilities that ecocriticism revealed, Victorian scholars have been more hesitant.Footnote 5 His four categories encompass scientific developments of the period, relations between humans and non-human others, Victorian political economy's impact on the environment (including the rise of activism and “green politics” at the end of the nineteenth century), along with a need to examine the alarm and bewilderment accompanying the extraordinary number of ecological changes. As Parham expresses it, “the utility of ‘Victorian ecology’ resides in considering the multiplicity of ways—effective or otherwise—in which Victorian literary figures negotiated these dichotomies and, in turn, the complexity intrinsic to ecological thought.”Footnote 6
Implicitly intertwined with each of Parham's categories is the issue of emotion. The Victorians experienced strongly affective responses to environments, whether through their wonder as they learned of the difference of Britain's expanding colonial holdings, or through the misery caused by the pollution and urban overcrowding that were byproducts of industrialism. Philip Steer has convincingly argued for reading industrial novels as climate change works, and his assertion of the “strange and troubled kind of intimacy between our own moment of climate change and nineteenth-century Britain” reveals some of the affective connections experienced by critical readers who see parallels between our present moment of ecological catastrophe, and the varied forms of climatic alteration experienced by the Victorians.Footnote 7
Alexa Weik von Mossner has helpfully characterized affective reactions to the environment as a type of twofold embodiment. She asserts provocatively that, “our minds are both embodied (in a physical body) and embedded (in a physical environment), not only when we interact with the real world but also in our engagement with imaginary worlds.”Footnote 8 We might extend her parameters a little further to think about trans-historical comparisons, connecting our present ecological dilemma to that of the past, while attempting to remain conscious of our cultural, temporal, and physical embeddedness.
To engage with Victorian emotions surrounding the environment is for some a quest to locate and understand a potential beginning point for the Anthropocene.Footnote 9 Through examining a text like Anthony Trollope's two-volume travelogue, Australia and New Zealand (1873), we not only begin to see Trollope's own conflicting emotions when faced with the vastness and difference of Australia (and his reactions range from awe at its natural resources to contempt for what he perceives as the docility of its native wildlife), the author also provides us with an often unwitting first-hand account of the deleterious effects of northern hemisphere ventures like pastoralization. He charts the damage caused by deforestation (a subject he revisits with some passion in his 1874 novella, Harry Heathcote of Gangoil), while also demonstrating the destructive impact of importing European livestock to the colony. There are many places within the travelogue where Trollope carefully analyzes his own emotional state.Footnote 10 But it is also interesting to consider the role of hindsight in informing readerly affects provoked by the work.
One of the heartbreaking aspects of working on the Victorian environment is to see how little has changed since the nineteenth century, as the need for sustainability competes with the idea of the world as a “resource” ripe for plunder. We might look to the fog pervading Dickens's Bleak House (1852–53) or the “unparliamentary” smoke of Gaskell's North and South (1853) for early representations of pollution, while the ivory trade depicted by Conrad in Heart of Darkness reminds us of an ongoing conservation battle that has yet to be won.Footnote 11 A further striking example of the type of cross-temporal affect that I seek to outline may be found in Trollope's novel, John Caldigate (1879), when the narrator describes the vandalism of the gold-mining industry, highlighting the carelessness with which those in pursuit of wealth take what they need from the ground and move on:
They had walked about half a mile from the town, turning down a lane at the back of the house, and had made their way through yawning pit-holes and heaps of dirt and pools of yellow water,—where everything was disorderly and apparently deserted,—till they came to a cluster of heaps so large as to look like little hills; and here there were signs of mining vitality. On their way they had not come across a single shred of vegetation, though here and there stood the bare trunks of a few dead and headless trees, the ghosts of the forest which had occupied the place six or seven years previously.Footnote 12
The narrator's tone makes apparent Trollope's dismay at the damage caused by the miners. With its craters, dirt, and stagnant water, the scene is a desolate waste land that is almost post-apocalyptic. While Trollope may not couch his critique in ecological terms, it is clear that his narrator is aghast and ashamed at the damage, and how quickly European settlers have wreaked devastation upon their adopted home.
I am struck by how similar Trollope's description is to contemporary accounts of the laying to waste of landscapes by today's mining corporations.Footnote 13 My Anthropocenic embeddedness makes reading this and many other Victorian environmental accounts a deeply visceral experience, and demonstrates how an emotion- or affect-driven methodology can illuminate apparently familiar literary and historical texts.Footnote 14 It therefore seems an obvious next step for Victorian scholars to inflect our ecocritical work with affect and emotions theory, which will enable important insights into the fear, uncertainty, and trauma characterizing environmental change then and now. Yet there are many other threads of Victorian studies that stand to benefit from an emotion- or affect-based methodology, which sheds light on the intensity of Victorian feelings and how they became the spurs to so many different forms of action.