Remembering and Repeating: Biblical Creation in Paradise LostAs a reinterpretation of Milton, this study engages the ideas of Freud, Nietzsche, and Derrida. However, the author derives her thesis from Milton's own debt to ancient Biblical sources. The Bible, says Schwartz, offers Milton a pattern of repeated beginnings that informs his depiction of the universe and characterizes his poetic and interpretative processes. This original reading of the Bible enables a powerful rereading of Paradise Lost. |
From inside the book
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... Chaos vs. creation The unclean realm Cosmogonic conflict Chaos and the fall 2 " Secret gaze or open admiration " : The invitation to origins Curiosity and knowledge page ix 1 3 8 11 24 31 353 40 41 Things visible to mortal sight 53 3 ...
... Chaos vs. creation The unclean realm Cosmogonic conflict Chaos and the fall 2 " Secret gaze or open admiration " : The invitation to origins Curiosity and knowledge page ix 1 3 8 11 24 31 353 40 41 Things visible to mortal sight 53 3 ...
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... Chaos : And the Sea Was No More , " and is reprinted here with their permission . A Woodrow Wilson Foundation Charlotte Newcombe Fellowship facilitated the initial drafts , and a generous faculty grant from the University of Colorado ...
... Chaos : And the Sea Was No More , " and is reprinted here with their permission . A Woodrow Wilson Foundation Charlotte Newcombe Fellowship facilitated the initial drafts , and a generous faculty grant from the University of Colorado ...
Page 1
... chaos continu- ally threatening , creation must be perpetually reasserted . For Milton , every act is an act of origin , and , conversely , the original act is an iteration.2 For all of his sympathy with postmodern thought on the 1 ...
... chaos continu- ally threatening , creation must be perpetually reasserted . For Milton , every act is an act of origin , and , conversely , the original act is an iteration.2 For all of his sympathy with postmodern thought on the 1 ...
Page 2
... Chaos ( I. 1-10 , my emphasis ) This inversion of the apparent Biblical order of creation and fall obtains throughout the poem : only after we meet the fallen angels in Books I and II do we hear Uriel's account 2 Introduction.
... Chaos ( I. 1-10 , my emphasis ) This inversion of the apparent Biblical order of creation and fall obtains throughout the poem : only after we meet the fallen angels in Books I and II do we hear Uriel's account 2 Introduction.
Page 3
... chaos brings him to the precincts of the sun and issues in Milton's invocation to light . Eve's nightmare gives way to an aubade . Even Satan's nocturnal designs of rebellion are quelled in the " morning ” in heaven . But once we are ...
... chaos brings him to the precincts of the sun and issues in Milton's invocation to light . Eve's nightmare gives way to an aubade . Even Satan's nocturnal designs of rebellion are quelled in the " morning ” in heaven . But once we are ...
Contents
And the sea was no more Chaos vs creation | 8 |
The unclean realm | 11 |
Cosmogonic conflict | 24 |
Chaos and the fall | 31 |
Secret gaze or open admiration The invitation to origins | 40 |
Curiosity and knowledge | 41 |
Things visible to mortal sight | 53 |
Remember and tell over Creation in sacred song | 60 |
Cosmic liturgy | 77 |
Paradise Lost as hymn | 83 |
Yet once more Recreation repetition and return | 91 |
The Satanic will | 94 |
Adamic return | 103 |
Notes | 111 |
129 | |
137 | |
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Remembering and Repeating: Biblical Creation in Paradise Lost Regina M. Schwartz No preview available - 2011 |
Common terms and phrases
abyss Adam and Eve Adam's angels astronomy atoms aubade Augustine battle becomes beginning Bible Biblical Biblical Genre Book commemoration compulsive cosmic cosmogonic cosmos created creation narrative Creator curiosity dark death debt deep depicts Derrida distinction divine doctrine drama earth epic eternal event evil exodus expression fall Freud Genesis George Wither gratitude heaven hell holy human hymn of praise Ibid infernal inquiry invocation knowledge Lewalski light liturgy Lord loss Lycidas memory Milton Milton's chaos Muse myth narcissism narrator Nativity Ode object offers origin Orpheus Paradise Lost Paradise Regained pleasure principle poem poet poetic poetry prayer Press Princeton Univ psalms Raphael redemption remember Renaissance repeat repetition revenge Ricoeur ritual sabbath sacred Samson Agonistes Satan scopophilia sense serpent sight sing song speaks Stanley Fish stars Symbolism tells temptation thee theodicy things thir thou Tiamat tradition trans unclean universe utterance voice voyeur war in heaven words
Popular passages
Page 2 - OF Man's First Disobedience, and the Fruit Of that Forbidden Tree, whose mortal taste Brought Death into the World, and all our woe, With loss of Eden, till one greater Man Restore us, and regain the blissful Seat, Sing Heav'nly Muse...