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Critical Planetary Romanticism
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01 September 2026

Facing planetary environmental crises, philosophers and theorists have critiqued the human exceptionalism of dominant forms of science. Yet today is not the first moment in which technological and political change have spurred efforts to rethink humanity’s place in the world. This book turns to the nineteenth-century German Romantic tradition to find resources for a new approach—critical planetary romanticism—that foregrounds the irreducible entanglement of all living and nonliving things.
Whitney A. Bauman argues that German Romantic figures such as Ernst Haeckel represent a vital alternative path for critical thought that strikingly anticipates contemporary new materialisms. Their thinking about evolution and ecology did not separate humans from the rest of the natural world but instead foregrounded an immanent understanding of the world from a position within it. Bauman traces the theological and religious influences on Romantic ecology, revealing how Christian as well as Indic and Islamic thought shaped scientific understandings of nature. Considering the history of scientific racism associated with Haeckel, he shows that critical planetary romanticism addresses the various embodied experiences of humanity and how they are shaped by power relations. At the same time, he challenges postmodern and critical theories to engage with the nonhuman world and the entirety of the planetary community. A bold intervention into environmental philosophy, Critical Planetary Romanticism reconceives new materialism and in so doing lays the groundwork for a new planetary politics.
RELIGION / Philosophy, NATURE / Ecology, ART / Movements / Romanticism, SCIENCE / Life Sciences / Ecology
— Ursula Goodenough, author of The Sacred Depths of Nature: How Life Emerged and Evolved
List of Illustrations
Acknowledgments
Introduction: Rethinking Nature Religiously—Reattuning to Our Worlds
Part I. Rethinking Truth (Relationality)
1. Evolution and Ecology: The Sciences of Radical Immanence and Relationality
2. Theology, Critical Romanticism, and the Construction of a Nonreductive Naturalism
Part II. Rethinking Beauty (Pluralism)
3. Art Forms of Nature: Aesthetics “from Below”
4. The Ugly Side of Common Grounds
Part III. Rethinking Goodness (Perspectivalism)
5. Reattunements to the Planetary Community
6. The Emergence of a Critical Planetary Romanticism for Earth’s Uncertain Future
Afterword: Critically Navigating the Planetary Seas
Notes
Bibliography
Index