A Concise Companion to Milton

A Concise Companion to Milton
Author: Angelica Duran
Publisher: John Wiley & Sons
Total Pages: 289
Release: 2007
Genre:
ISBN: 1405122722

With brevity, depth, and accessibility, this book helps readers to appreciate the works of John Milton, and to understand the great influence they have had on literature and other disciplines. Presents new and authoritative essays by internationally respected Milton scholars Explains how and why Milton’s works established their central place in the English literary canon Structured chronologically around Milton’s major works Also includes a select bibliography and a chronology detailing Milton’s life and works alongside relevant world events Ideal as a first critical work on Milton

John Milton

John Milton
Author: Gordon Campbell
Publisher: OUP Oxford
Total Pages: 507
Release: 2008-10-23
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 0191622982

This book re-examines scrupulously the writings and the life records of John Milton, in the context of a proper understanding of the recent developments in seventeenth-century historiography. Milton's thought has often been too simply described. The approach here is to interrogate more sceptically notions like puritanism, republicanism, radicalism, and dissent. A more complex story emerges, of Milton's culturally rich but ideologically conformist early decades, and of his radicalisation during the later years of Laudianism. We track the internal dynamics of English puritanism in the 1640s and the impact that has on his own convictions. In the 1650s Milton's thought and beliefs were reconciled to the role as public servant. In the 1660s a renewed confidence carried him towards the completion of his greatest project, Paradise Lost, and his final years were ones of creative fulfilment and renewed political engagement. Amid the discontinuities occasioned by shifting political circumstance, by the exigencies of polemical context, and the diversity of genres in which he wrote, Milton emerged as a major political thinker and significant systematic theologian, as well as the most eloquent prose writer and most accomplished poet of the age. A more human Milton appears in these pages, flawed, self-contractory, self-serving, arrogant, passionate, ruthless, ambitious, and cunning, as well as the literary genius who achieved so much.

The Life of John Milton

The Life of John Milton
Author: David Masson
Publisher: BoD – Books on Demand
Total Pages: 626
Release: 2022-11-10
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 3368132962

Reprint of the original, first published in 1871.

Milton, Toleration, and Nationhood

Milton, Toleration, and Nationhood
Author: Elizabeth Sauer
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 235
Release: 2014
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 1107041945

This study examines how Milton's polemical and imaginative literature intersects with representations of English Protestant nationhood. Through detailed case studies of Milton's works, Elizabeth Sauer shows the extent to which seventeenth-century English notions of nationhood and toleration can be subjected to literary and historicist inquiry.