This book offers new interpretations of Tennyson's major poems
along-side contemporary geology, and specifically Charles Lyell's
Principles of Geology (1830-3). Employing various approaches - from
close readings of both the poetic and geological texts, historical
contextualisation and the application of Bakhtin's concept of
dialogism - the book demonstrates not only the significance of geology
for Tennyson's poetry, but the vital import of Tennyson's poetics in
explicating the implications of geology for the nineteenth century and
beyond. Gender ideologies in The Princess (1847) are read via High
Miller's geology, while the writings of Lyell and other contemporary
geologist, comparative anatomists and language theorists are examined
along-side In Memoriam (1851) and Maud (1855). The book argues that
Tennyson's experimentation with Lyell's geology produced a remarkable
'uniformitarian' poetics that is best understood via Bakhtinian theory;
a poetics that reveals the seminal role methodologies in geology played
in the development of divisions between science and culture, and that
also, quite profoundly, anticipates the crisis in language later
associated with the linguistic turn of the twentieth century.