"One aspect of Wordsworth’s poetry that has survived generations of revisionary scholarship is its sense of place. Katherine Bergren’s mildly shocking case for Wordsworth 'sense of planet' operates through patient and innovative readings of three writers 'repurposing' Wordsworth’s writings—a repurposing that in its turn reveals an entirely more worldly and global Wordsworth. Meticulously situating these intertextual encounters in the context of discussions of postcoloniality, transatlantic mobility, and ecocritical belonging, The Global Wordsworth updates a romantic worldliness we have only just begun to read."
~Pieter Vermeulen, author of Romanticism after the Holocaust
"A model of academic excellence, this literary study of William Wordsworth upon various cultures around the world is an extraordinarily informative and thought-provoking read."
~Midwest Book Review
"Recommended."
~Choice
"Beautifully written, equally attentive to Romanticism and its afterlives, this book is essential reading for anyone interested in Romanticism and its legacies, whether scholarly or general readers. It offers a genuinely original perspective on Wordsworth and his works, without insisting on the privilege of canonicity."
~Review 19
"The methodology of the Global Wordsworth is exciting and innovative and will have much to offer readers interested in understanding better the ways in which Romanticism might be deployed in a colonial or settler context....[T]he vision of Romanticism, and of Wordsworth, that emerges in Bergren’s book is more nuanced and indeed more 'worldly' than the one to which we have become accustomed."
~European Romantic Review