John Milton's Paradise Lost: A Sourcebook

Front Cover
Margaret Kean
Psychology Press, 2005 - 173 pages

John Milton's epic poem Paradise Lost (1667) is a literary landmark. His reworking of Biblical tales of the loss of Eden constitutes not only a gripping literary work, but a significant musing on fundamental human concerns ranging from freedom and fate to conscience and consciousness.

Designed for students new to Milton's complex, lengthy work, this sourcebook:

* outlines the often unfamiliar contexts of seventeenth-century England which are so crucial to Paradise Lost
* completes the contextual study with a chronology and reprinted documents from the period
* examines and reprints a broad range of responses to the poem, from early reactions to recent criticism
* reprints the most frequently studied passages of the poem, along with extensive commentary and annotation of unfamiliar or significant terms used in Milton's work
* provides cross-references between the textual, contextual and critical sections of the sourcebook, to show how all the materials can be called upon in an individual reader's encounter with the text
* suggests further reading for those facing the huge array of critical work on the poem.
With an emphasis on enjoying as well as understanding what can be a somewhat daunting work, this sourcebook will be a welcome resource for anyone new to Paradise Lost.

 

Contents

Interpretations
2
Contextual Overview
5
Chronology
12
From John Milton Areopagitica A Speech of Mr John Milton for the Liberty
18
From Edmund Waller To The King Upon His Majestys Happy Return 1664
24
Critical History
33
Early Critical Reception
41
From Edmund Burke A Philosophical Enquiry into the Origin of Our Ideas
47
Modern Criticism
54
From Diane K McColley Miltons Eve 1983
66
Key Passages
79
24
83
25
113
Recommended Modern Editions of Paradise Lost
161
Copyright

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About the author (2005)

Margaret Kean is the Dame Helen Gardner Fellow in English at St Hilda's College, Oxford. She has published a number of articles on Milton's poetry.

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