Milton and Religious Controversy: Satire and Polemic in Paradise LostReligious satire and polemic constitute an elusive presence in Paradise Lost. John N. King shows how Milton’s poem takes on new meaning when understood as part of a strategy of protest against ecclesiastical formalism and clericalism. The experience of Adam and Eve before the Fall recalls many Puritan devotional habits. After the Fall, they are prone to ‘idolatrous’ ritual and ceremony that anticipate the religious ‘error’ of Milton’s own age. Vituperative sermons, broadsides and pamphlets, notably Milton’s own tracts, afford a valuable context for recovering the poem’s engagement with the violent history of the Civil Wars, Commonwealth and Restoration, while contemporary visual satires help to clarify Miltonic practice. Eighteenth-century critics who attacked breaches of decorum and sublimity in Paradise Lost alternately deplored and ignored a literary and polemical tradition deployed by Milton’s contemporaries. This important study sheds new light on Milton’s epic and its literary and religious contexts. |
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Inhalt
Controversial merriment | xix |
Milton reads Spensers May Eclogue | 21 |
Satan and the demonic conclave | 42 |
Miltons Den of Error | 67 |
The Paradise of Fools | 87 |
Laughter in heaven | 107 |
Miltonic transubstantiation | 131 |
Idolatry in Eden | 151 |
The image of both churches | 165 |
Conclusion | 187 |
transcriptions from satirical broadsheets | 194 |
Select Bibliography | 204 |
220 | |
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
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