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『失楽園』における虚の無限と隠蔽された強度:有機的表象と遊牧的表象の思想史鈴木, 繁夫 03 1900 (has links)
科学研究費補助金 研究種目:基盤研究(C)(2) 課題番号:10610468 研究代表者:鈴木 繁夫 研究期間:1998-1999年度
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Poetry of revolution : the poetic representation of political conflict and transition in Milton’s Paradise Lost and Marvell’s Cromwell PoemsLe Roux, Selene 03 1900 (has links)
Thesis (MA (English Literature))--University of Stellenbosch, 2007. / Seventeenth-century England witnessed a time of radical sociopolitical
conflict and transition. This thesis aims to examine how
two writers closely associated with this period and its
controversies, John Milton and Andrew Marvell, represent events
as they unfold. This thesis focuses specifically on Milton’s
Paradise Lost and Marvell’s Cromwellian poems in order to show
how these poets reinterpret established literary conventions and
invoke traditional Puritan practices in order to explain and
legitimise the precarious new dispensation of post-Civil War
England. At the same time, their work produces ambiguities and
tensions that threaten to undermine the very discourse that they
attempt to endorse. Both poets’ work indicates an active
involvement in the political embroilments of their time while
retaining its aesthetic value. Therefore, these texts do not only
function on an aesthetic level but also within the historical
framework of political ideologies.
The focus of this thesis is a discussion of the relationship
between politics and poetry, with the emphasis on poetry of conflict and transition in civil society. In other words, it is not
only considered how different poetic genres reflect social and
political change in different ways but also how these genres in
turn contribute to political rhetoric. During the English Revolution Milton and Marvell try to provide solutions for the
political disturbance, even while remaining aware of the new
conflicts produced in the attempt.
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'Fixed fate, free will' : fate, natural law, necessity, providence, and classical epic narrative in Paradise LostAllendorf, Kalina January 2017 (has links)
The present thesis considers the allusive and narrative function of fate and its associated concepts of providence, free will, necessity, and natural law in Paradise Lost. It argues that the narrative function of these concepts is shaped by Milton's allusions to classical epic, and assesses their impact on the Christian theology of the poem. It identifies unnoted allusions to well-known epic models (Homer, Vergil, Lucan), and examines how Lucretius' account of natural laws and post-Vergilian representations of epic aftermath influence Milton's own depiction of transgression and its aftermath in Paradise Lost. Chapter 1 considers Satan and other fallen angels' definition of fate as a materialist alternative for the personal rule of the Father. It traces several allusions to fate in cosmological and ethical settings, in Lucretius, Vergil, Lucan, and Statius, and analyses how these allusions interact with the Hesiodic mythical material in the opening books of Milton's epic. Chapter 2 focuses on a pattern of previously unnoted allusions to Lucretius' De Rerum Natura in the narrative of the Fall, culminating in Book 9. It argues that in his temptation of Eve, Milton's Satan subverts Lucretian teachings about the boundaries governing the physical universe as he persuades Eve to transgress her natural state in Eden. Chapter 3 discusses the appearance of the Father in an allusive epic council scene in Book 3. In the dialogue between Father and Son, I suggest, Milton evokes negotiations between the Homeric and Vergilian deities, depicting his God as surpassing his pagan epic counterparts who can only delay the fate of mortals, but not change them. Chapter 4 suggests that Milton's depiction of the aftermath of the Fall is indebted to post-Vergilian epic narratives of 'aftermath'. The final Books of Paradise Lost and the portrayal of Adam and Eve's moral freedom as they leave paradise, with providence their guide, should be read, I posit, against the backdrop of scenes and imagery from Lucan's Bellum Civile and Statius' Thebaid.
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Critical studies of John Milton, T.S. Eliot and other writersPeter, John Desmond January 1973 (has links)
No description available.
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Os Lusíadas e Paraíso Perdido : dois momentos estéticos da poesia épicaGois, Gisela Reis de 24 February 2016 (has links)
Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior - CAPES / This dissertation aims mainly to make a comparative study of the renaissance and baroque aesthetic
resources in epics, using, therefore, The Lusiads (1572), which is a heroic poem on the Portuguese
maritime expansion, and Paradise Lost (1667), by John Milton, better known and studied as a
protestant humanist epic about the fall of the first human couple. The main theoretical basis for this
study is the formulations of Gilbert Highet (1954), Anazildo Vasconcelos da Silva (1984, 1987,
2007) and Christina Ramalho (2013) on the epic genre and the classical tradition. There were also
major contributions to this work: Joaquim Nabuco (1872), Bowra (1950), Metzer and Coogan
(2002) and Saraiva and Lopes (2010). The aspect of comparison between the works is the
permanence of classical mythology in the literary plan of the works. Therefore, it was adopted
Hesiod (1995, 1996) as a mythographic source, because of the educational intentions of his works.
The Lusiads are considered, according to the theory of literary speech and semiotization of Anazildo
Vasconcelos da Silva, a renaissance epic and, thus it contains the reference to authors, works and
pagan mythology present in the classic epic model (Iliad, Odyssey), besides the balance between
thought and emotion and the formulation of universalizing concepts. While Paradise Lost is
understood as a work of baroque epic model, which proposes the projection of the poetic persona in
the narrative, the narrator as agent of the character subjective logic and sentimentalization of the
epic proposition. Although, both have what Gilbert Highet calls classic influence. In other words,
they are impregnated by classical thought, whose presence in the body of the poems varies in
strength, importance and penetration. Consequently, this research will specifically treat the ways
how the classic influence manifests in Camões and John Milton epics. / Esta dissertação tem como objetivo principal fazer um estudo comparado dos recursos estéticos em
épicos renascentistas e barrocos, utilizando-se, para tanto, das obras Os Lusíadas (1572), poema
heroico de Camões sobre a expansão marítima portuguesa, e Paraíso Perdido (1667), de John
Milton, mais conhecida e estudada como uma epopeia humanista protestante sobre a queda do
primeiro casal humano. A base teórica principal para esse estudo são as formulações de Gilbert
Highet (1954), Anazildo Vasconcelos da Silva (1984, 1987, 2007) e Christina Ramalho (2013) a
respeito do gênero épico e a tradição clássica. Também foram contribuições importantes: Joaquim
Nabuco (1872), Bowra (1950), Metzer e Coogan (2002) e Saraiva e Lopes (2010). O aspecto de
comparação entre as epopeias da era moderna é a permanência da mitologia clássica no plano
literário das obras. Para tanto, adotou-se Hesíodo (1995, 1996) como fonte mitográfica, tendo vista
as intenções didáticas de suas obras. Os Lusíadas é considerada, segundo a teoria da semiotização
literária do discurso de Silva, uma epopeia renascentista e, portanto, apresenta referências a autores
e obras e à mitologia pagã presentes no modelo épico clássico (Ilíada e Odisseia), além do
equilíbrio entre pensamento e emoção e a elaboração de conceitos universalizantes. Já Paraíso
Perdido é entendida como uma obra do modelo épico barroco, que propõe a projeção do eu-lírico
no relato; o narrador como agente de uma lógica subjetiva do personagem e a sentimentalização da
proposição épica. Contudo, ambas apresentam o que Gilbert Highet chama de influência clássica.
Em outras palavras, são obras impregnadas pelo pensamento clássico, cuja presença no corpo dos
poemas varia em força, importância e penetração. Por conseguinte, esta pesquisa tem como objetivo
específico tratar dos modos como a influência clássica se manifesta nas epopeias de Camões e John
Milton.
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Milton’s God and the Sacred imaginationKeim, Charles Andrew 05 1900 (has links)
The poetic effectiveness of Milton's God is a fundamental critical issue in Paradise
Lost, and the thesis addresses this concern by first surveying the various representations of
God contained in the Hebrew scriptures. To speak of the biblical God, one must first
understand the tremendous diversity o f his portrayals: he meets with some people in human
form, and with others as a voice, a light, or an awesome presence. Milton's God shares less
with the God o f Genesis than he does with the God of the prophets; yet Milton's
representation demonstrates that though Eden will be lost, God will continue to manifest
himself to those who seek his face. The cosmology of the epic reveals both the immensity o f
creation and the intimacy o f its Creator, since the entire world is filled with the glory o f God,
and yet the garden where Adam and Eve live is an archetypal sanctuary and their bower a
type of Inner Temple. Milton's justification o f God's ways rests upon the timelessness of
God; events that appear anachronistic at first are used to establish a context that looks beyond
the strict limits of human time. On the one hand, the Incarnation, Resurrection, and
Apocalypse are separate events that have not yet come to pass; but on the other hand, Milton
shows how these events are simultaneously present and completed in God's presence. From
God's throne, we participate in a cosmic perspective where the categories of past, present,
and future are compressed into one time: we are before and beyond time. Such a transcendent
perspective engenders a powerful truth: before Adam and Eve have been tempted, God's
grace and mercy have found them out and they have been restored. Though Eden must be
lost, the paradise of God's presence will remain. Adam and Eve will fall and the legacy of
their rash act will be paradoxically for all time, but not forever. God will restore his people
and wipe away their tears, and, in the context of Milton's depiction of God, that time of
redemption is now. / Arts, Faculty of / English, Department of / Graduate
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Revolutionary Satan: A Reevaluation of the Devil's Place in Paradise LostLavelle, William H. 30 April 2015 (has links)
No description available.
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Religious Toleration in English Literature from Thomas More to John MiltonPepperney, Justin R. 09 September 2009 (has links)
No description available.
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Människan som skapare, eller Den moderne Gud : Skapelseberättelsen som den skildras i Clay och Amnesia: A Machine for Pigs genom Milton och Shelley / Man as creator, or The modern God : The creation myth as it is portrayed in Clay and Amnesia: A Machine for Pigs through Milton and ShelleyNordmark, Ida January 2018 (has links)
This thesis concerns the themes of godhood and creation in modern, secular works. Using literary analysis, the thesis examines how the creation myth and the relationship between creator and creation is written in David Almond’s novel Clay and the video game Amnesia: A Machine for Pigs, in comparison with how the same relationship is presented in Frankenstein and Paradise Lost. The thesis focuses on how the different works portray the themes of god, creation, original sin, and atonement, where the portrayals differ and where are the same. It ends with a discussion on how modern, secular stories using these themes manage to separate themselves from their religious origins while still remaining true to their inspirations. / Denna uppsats behandlar ämnena gudomlighet och skapelse i moderna, sekulära verk. Genom att använda litterär analys undersöker uppsatsen hur skapelseberättelsen och förhållandet mellan skapare och skapelse skildras i David Almonds roman Clay och datorspelet Amnesia: A Machine for Pigs i jämförelse med hur samma förhållande presenteras i Frankenstein och Paradise Lost. Uppsatsen fokuserar på hur de olika verken skildrar temana gud, skapelsen, syndafallet och försoningen, samt skillnader och likheter i skildringarna. Den avslutas med en diskussion om hur moderna, sekulära berättelsen som använder dessa teman separerar sig från sitt religiösa ursprung men ändå förblir trogna sina inspirationer.
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Att göra kaos i ett cisnormativt kosmos : en laborerande studie av den transteoretiska och-aktivistiska samvaron med SatanJangmyr, Michelle January 2015 (has links)
The purpose of this paper is to present an opening to argue for a transtheoretical and - activist fellowship with Satan and the values connected to hir. A transactivist fellows-hip with Satan builds on two primary points of contact. It is on one hand the opportu-nity to take advantage of the non-conformist, non-normative and polemical signifi-cance Satan has been attributed, especially in the history of literature, but also in the history of religion. And on the other hand this study also dwells upon how Satan as a figure has served as an expression of evilness, hatred, darkness and suffering amongst people. The questions i ask, is if there is a course that allows me to theorize for a stra-tegic collaboration between the transactivist struggle and the ideas that is connected to the satanfigure in John Miltons Paradise Lost. I also ask if there is a transtheoretical-and activist approach where Satan can function as an ally within the transactivist re-sistance. The purpose of this paper also carries on a confrontation with the notion of ”tone-policing", and love and tenderness as the only sanctioned (and praised) incenti-ves for political struggle. In this thesis I make a link between the logic that connects to Satan as an ideological basis and a non-conformist (militant), seperatist, anti-capi-talist and queer attitude in transactivist struggle. With the help of Susan Stryker's the-ory of the monsteridentity I will experiment with extracts from John Milton's Paradise Lost, where the Satan figure and the transactivist position builds on a fellowship as my analysis proceeds. To do this i use a queer-deleuzian tool as a method that focuses on textual framings within the idea of spatial relations, meaning how the actual text can and should correspond with discourses outside its territorial space. This allow me to di-sengage Satan from its original amplitude, and instead of interpreting how Satan handles hirself in Paradise Lost, i will liberate Satan from this narrative and create a relation between hir and my thesis. In this way I create an occasion, through a theore-tical approach to trans-subjectivity as comparable to the perception of the monster as a non-normative figure, to bring the transgendered monster together with the satanic monster. The ”what” that will subsequently crystallize during the analysis have the intention to tell the story about the ways in which the non-confirmative transactivist have in common with Satan. After doing this i will conclude my thesis with a discus-sion that reflects on how this fellowship has evolved in relation to the proposed politi-cal and emotional connections between the non-confomative transactivist and Satan.
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