Spokesperson Milton: Voices in Contemporary CriticismCharles W. Durham, Kristin Pruitt McColgan Susquehanna University Press, 1994 - 284 Seiten In part II the authors address and interpret religious themes in Paradise Lost and Paradise Regained. The essays in part III suggest the extent to which politics inform Milton's poetry and contribute to the shaping of his prose, and they consider the effect of those political views on Milton's contemporaries and on later generations of readers. Part IV investigates ways in which Milton establishes his own authority within texts and encourages readers to choose between conflicting models of authority. Milton's adaptation of traditional literary motifs and forms is addressed in part V, and part VI explores issues of gender and hierarchy in light of Milton's portrayals of the relationships between Adam and Eve in Paradise Lost and Samson and Dalila in Samson Agonistes. |
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... political stance as a supporter of the Puri- tan cause from an assessment of the stylistic achievement of Milton's poetry . Ironically , Arnold was himself " making an explicitly political statement on the relationship between art and ...
... political stance as a supporter of the Puri- tan cause from an assessment of the stylistic achievement of Milton's poetry . Ironically , Arnold was himself " making an explicitly political statement on the relationship between art and ...
Seite 134
... political and religious associations , what resulted was an aesthetic reading of Milton , seemingly void of any political or religious meaning . But as Bernard Sharratt recognizes , once a poem like Par- adise Lost is " dissociated from ...
... political and religious associations , what resulted was an aesthetic reading of Milton , seemingly void of any political or religious meaning . But as Bernard Sharratt recognizes , once a poem like Par- adise Lost is " dissociated from ...
Seite 135
... political its highest polemical mode.33 Once we recognize and acknowledge that Milton's greatest poetry was written at the nexus of religious and political controversy and that its language is freighted with political argument , our job ...
... political its highest polemical mode.33 Once we recognize and acknowledge that Milton's greatest poetry was written at the nexus of religious and political controversy and that its language is freighted with political argument , our job ...
Inhalt
JOHN T SHAWCROSS | 5 |
Symbol of | 21 |
Satan | 31 |
Urheberrecht | |
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Spokesperson Milton: Voices in Contemporary Criticism Charles W. Durham,Kristin Pruitt McColgan Eingeschränkte Leseprobe - 1994 |
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
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