The Development of the Feeling for Nature in the Middle Ages and Modern Times
So, what's this book about? It's not a novel with a plot, but it follows a clear and compelling idea. Biese's "story" is about tracing a feeling. He starts in the early Middle Ages, a time when wild nature was often seen as hostile, a place of danger or a mere illustration of religious ideas. Mountains weren't scenic; they were obstacles. Forests were dark and full of threats. Then, he guides us through the centuries, showing how this attitude slowly, almost imperceptibly, began to change.
The Story
Biese walks us through literature, art, and philosophy from medieval times right up to the modern era (for him, the 19th century). He points out the moments where people began to describe a landscape for its own sake, not just as a setting. He shows how the fear of wilderness gradually mixed with, and then was often replaced by, admiration and a search for the sublime. The "plot" is this gradual awakening of an aesthetic sense—the development of the "feeling for nature" promised in the title. It's the journey from seeing a storm as God's wrath to seeing it as awe-inspiring power.
Why You Should Read It
This book changed how I look at the world outside my window. Reading it is like getting a pair of historical glasses. You start to realize that our modern love for hiking, national parks, and landscape photography has a history. Biese makes you appreciate that the profound calm you might feel watching a river isn't just a personal quirk—it's the endpoint of a cultural shift centuries in the making. It connects the dots between medieval monks, Romantic poets, and your own Instagram photos of a sunset. It gives depth to a feeling we often take for granted.
Final Verdict
This is a perfect pick for curious readers who love history, literature, or just thinking about how our minds work. It's for anyone who's ever wondered, "Why do I find this so beautiful?" while looking at a mountain range. It's not a light beach read, but it's not impenetrable academia either. Biese writes with a scholar's care but a genuine enthusiasm for his subject. If you enjoy ideas that unfold slowly and make you see the everyday world in a new light, you'll find this deeply rewarding. Just be ready to look at every old painting and poem a little differently afterwards.
Emily Wilson
1 year agoFrom the very first page, the pacing is just right, keeping you engaged. This story will stay with me.
Elizabeth Lewis
7 months agoPerfect.
Amanda Lee
9 months agoI started reading out of curiosity and the arguments are well-supported by credible references. I couldn't put it down.