In Radical Romanticism, Mark Cladis argues that Romanticism is not a dead aesthetic movement but an ongoing political and spiritual tradition. With compelling readings of William Wordsworth, W. E. B. Du Bois, Leslie Silko, and others, Cladis shows that radical Romantics sustain ecological, democratic life in diverse societies. This book is a creative contribution to ongoing scholarly conversations in literary studies, religious studies, political theory, and environmental humanities, and it suggests that literature can move people to action, transforming ecologies and spiritualities for a climate-changed world. -- Alda Balthrop-Lewis, author of Thoreau's Religion: Walden Woods, Social Justice, and the Politics of Asceticism Stories are all we have, says Leslie Marmon Silko, and landscapes are storied, too. In this important book by Mark Cladis, Indigeneity, race, and environment braid together to shape a "radical romanticism," that is its own storya way of life and a lens through which to re-encounter vitalism and faith, drawing on Silko, Du Bois, Thoreau, and more. A brilliant text for all humanists now. -- Bonnie Honig, author of A Feminist Theory of Refusal Cladiss Radical Romanticism crackles with a bold new story about romanticism, resisting the notion of the romantic as a passive admirer of natures untouched beauty. For radical romantics, natures uncertainty, beauty, and mystery fuel political, communal, and environmental justice. By building fresh bridges across the nineteenth, twentieth, and twenty-first centuriesand among writers not often placed in conversationCladis offers a new public discourse for our planetary future. -- Jonathan Kahn, author of Divine Discontent: The Religious Imagination of W. E. B. Du Bois In Radical Romanticism, Mark Cladis offers an energetic new approach to the Romantic literary tradition, meticulously defining and exemplifying what radical Romanticism is, how it works stylistically in an impressively eclectic body of trans-Atlantic and trans-historical literature, and why it matters to recognize this tradition. -- Scott Slovic, coeditor of Nature and Literary Studies