Milton's Uncertain Eden: Understanding Place in Paradise Lost

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Routledge, 2013 M09 13 - 200 pages

This study describes a variety of ways of thinking about place in the Renaissance and in Paradise Lost. Despite coming from different perspectives, they have in common the idea that the difficulty of the relationship of reciprocity that poetic subjects often expect from their environment destabilizes those subjects’ understanding, not only of environment, but of themselves.

The study explores destabilization as it affects aspects of the poem from Adam’s sense of the landscape of Eden and the meaning of the Fall itself, to the relationship the ambiguous landscapes of Paradise Lost create between Adam and Eve, the poet and the reader; all of whom are struggling to make sense of the same problematically described places.

To a surprisingly large extent, the description of prelapsarian Eden and the events that go on within it have in common a failed attempt to understand the nature of the surroundings. In observing the centrality and difficultly of this poetic discourse of place, the problem of place is found at the very heart of the Fall.

 

Contents

Introduction
1
Vergil Poetic Rereading and the Genre Problem
21
Paradise Lost 7 and 8
53
Description and the Inverted Rhetoric of Paradise Lost 9
81
The Postlapsariam Environment
115
Conclusion
155
Notes
159
Bibliography
183
Index
187
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