Politics, Poetics, and Hermeneutics in Milton's ProseDavid Loewenstein, James Turner Cambridge University Press, 26/04/1990 - 282 من الصفحات In this book, some of the most eminent critics of seventeenth-century literature and some of the liveliest younger scholars explore the interconnections among Milton's politics, poetics, and prose writings. While the essays focus on Milton's prose, they open up new perspectives on his major poems and on seventeenth-century ideologies, theologies, and interpretive practices. These essays challenge the notion of Milton's prose as an "achievement of the left hand," proposing a complex relation between text and context, the aesthetic and the sociopolitical, issues of representation and the politics of gender. |
المحتوى
the apocalyptic strain in Miltons | 9 |
the question of interpretation | 41 |
The metaphysics of Miltons divorce tracts | 69 |
No meer amatorious novel? | 85 |
voicing contexts 16435 | 103 |
Ireland under | 123 |
Milton and martyrdom | 153 |
Milton and the poetics of defense | 171 |
A Treatise of Civil Power | 193 |
Citation authority and De Doctrina Christiana | 227 |
The poetics of engagement | 257 |
276 | |
طبعات أخرى - عرض جميع المقتطفات
عبارات ومصطلحات مألوفة
achievement action active appears Areopagitica argues argument asserts attack authority becomes beginning body cause chapter Charles choice Christ Christian church Civil claim concerns conscience context course Defense Discipline discourse discussion divine divorce Doctrine earlier early effect elect engagement England English example fact faith figure follows force freedom give hand History human imaginative individual interpretation issue jeremiad John kind King King's language later less liberty literary London marriage martyrs means metaphor Milton mind nature Notes offers once pamphlets Paradise Lost Parliament passage poet poetic poetry polemical political position present prophetic prose question radical reader reading reason refers Reformation relation religion remains rhetorical scripture Second seems sense sexual shows speak Spirit story style suffering suggests things thought tracts tradition true truth turn vision writing