Bringing together both established and emerging scholars of the long
nineteenth century, literary modernism, landscape and hemispheric
studies, and contemporary fiction, New Versions of Pastoral offers a
historically wide-ranging account of the Bucolic tradition, tracing the
formal diversity of pastoral writing up to the present day. Dividing its
analytic focus between periods, the volume contextualizes a wide range
of exemplary practitioners, genres, and movements: contributors attend
to early modernism's vacillation between critiquing and aestheticizing
the rise of primitivist nostalgia; the ambiguous mythologization of the
English estate by the twentieth-century manor house novel; and the
post-national revisiting of the countryside and its sovereign status in
contemporary imaginings of regional life.