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Milton's anti-trinitarianism and Paradise regainedBecker, Karen Sue January 2010 (has links)
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Milton's Satan; a study of his origin and significanceSiemens, Katie January 1953 (has links)
My thesis is a study of the poetic origin of Milton's Satan
and his significance apart from his dramatic function in Paradise Lost
and Paradise Regained.
I have tried to establish Satan's poetic origin by investigating
the studies of a number of prominent critics, Milton's own prose
works, such as the Eikonoklastes and his Second Defence, and also the
correspondences between Satan's speeches and the words of King Charles
I in his Eikon Bazilike. From these studies I have drawn the conclusion
that Milton used King Charles I as he appears in the Eikon Bazilike as
his model for Satan. Since Milton hated the King for his tyranny,
Milton's emotional involvement and the human model resulted in the portrayal
of a Satan, whose vividness and realism make him one of the most
towering Satans in world literature.
Satan's true significance lies in his revelation of Milton's
personality. He reflects Milton's thoughts, his political and religious
philosophy, his attitudes towards contemporary events, and his personality
traits. Milton's development of Satan's personality reveals his
unsurpassed craftsmanship as a poetic artist. As we follow Satan's
career we discover a new Milton, differing enormously from the generally accepted conception of a stern Puritan. The Milton revealed in Satan's
action has a keen appreciate of all that is beautiful in the universe,
besides moral values. He has a sense of humour and a capacity for
friendship, hitherto found incompatible with Milton's retiring character.
Paradise Lost also shows us Milton's hope for the future. In man's
regeneration he looks forward to an England liberated from the tyranny
of kings, while his spiritual vision embraces the realization of God's
initial purpose when he created man; namely, that "Earth be changed to
Heaven, and Heaven to Earth." / Arts, Faculty of / English, Department of / Graduate
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Definitions of obedience in Paradise regainedLearmonth, Nicola K, n/a January 2007 (has links)
The thesis has two parts. Part One surveys the debate on how to define Christian obedience and Milton�s prose contributions to that discourse. In the century leading up to Milton�s prose writings there was much debate in England over how to define spiritual obedience. Civil authorities argued that matters of religion fell within state jurisdiction and that an individual�s spiritual obedience should be subject to outward scrutiny and external control; but these definitions were contested by Protestant reformers. Chapter One traces the issue up to Milton�s contributions.
Chapter Two traces Milton�s thinking about obedience, spiritual and secular, through his own prose writings: Milton defines obedience as a responsible freedom which requires continual critical assessment of authority. In reaction to the political and ecclesiastical developments of his own time, Milton places increasing emphasis on the role of the individual in defining and expressing obedience to God by means of scriptural study and open discussion. Milton argues that liberty is a necessary pre-condition for giving true obedience to God, and this idea comes to the fore in the later prose tracts, which respond to political and ecclesiastical developments that Milton interpreted as threatening the individual�s liberty of conscience.
Part Two examines Paradise Regained (1671), in which Milton advances his interpretation of obedience through his characterisation of the Son of God. Chapter Three shows how Milton links those forms of Christian obedience which he rejects in his prose writing to either Satan or satanic influence. Through his depiction of the Son�s responses to Satan, Milton indicates that Satan�s versions of obedience are designed to distract the Son, and any other believer, from giving proper obedience to God.
Chapter Four traces how Milton�s depiction of the Son of God demonstrates his understanding of the right reasons for, and ways of, giving proper obedience to God. The Son�s firm obedience is a state of mind and comprises knowledge of God through scriptural study, conversation and meditation. This exemplary obedience is motivated by an appreciation for and desire to participate in God�s glory (ie., Creation), and Milton indicates that it is this appreciation of divine glory that enables the Son of God to successfully resist Satan�s temptations.
Chapter Five examines Milton�s final episode, the pinnacle temptation, in terms of the obedience which he has approved throughout the poem. This chapter addresses Milton�s handling of the reader�s expectations for this scene, and the symbolic language and setting of the pinnacle episode. Unlike any other writers on the temptations in the wilderness, Milton invests the Son�s victory (and Satan�s defeat) on the pinnacle with symbolic power by depicting the Son standing in firm obedience to God. Thus Milton presents his reader with the definitive expression of humanity�s obedience to God: the Son�s stand is a symbolic return to the "Godlike erect" stance ascribed to prelapsarian humanity in Paradise Lost (PL, IV.289), and with this firm, upright obedience Milton shows the rest of humanity how to regain Paradise.
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Giving and Thanksgiving: Gratitude and Adiaphora in A Mask and Paradise RegainedNewberry, Julie Nicole 2011 August 1900 (has links)
John Milton begins his Second Defence of the English People by stressing the universal importance of gratitude: "In the whole life and estate of man the first duty is to be grateful to God." Peter Medine has shown the prominence of gratitude in Paradise Lost, but scholars have not fully appreciated the role of this virtue elsewhere in Milton's writing. This thesis is an attempt to redress that oversight with reference to A Mask and Paradise Regained, while also answering a question that Medine raises but does not satisfactorily resolve: Why gratitude? Both texts have been read as responses to the early modern debate about the doctrine of things indifferent, or adiaphora, and I argue that this context helps explain Milton's interest in gratitude. The first section of this thesis accordingly reviews the historical and theological context of the adiaphora controversy, while the second examines Milton's more direct treatment of things indifferent and gratitude, primarily in De Doctrina Christiana. In the remaining sections, historical and literary analysis of A Mask and Paradise Regained illuminates how Milton addresses tensions in the doctrine of things indifferent by emphasizing gratitude.
Of the commonly recognized criteria for directing the use of adiaphora—the rule of faith, the rule of charity, and the glorification of God, often through gratitude—gratitude toward God frequently receives less thorough attention, yet Milton gives it a prominent role in A Mask and allows it to overshadow the other guidelines in Paradise Regained. Although gratitude is itself sometimes subject to manipulation in these texts, both A Mask and Paradise Regained suggest that the requirement of God-ward gratitude can serve as a check against subtle distortions of the other guidelines. The effectiveness of this strategy stems from the fact that the vices gratitude guards against—self-indulgent ingratitude, stoical ingratitude, and idolatry—are the vices that underlie licentiousness and superstition, the primary abuses of the doctrine of things indifferent. Milton's privileging of gratitude thus provides a way of cross-checking appeals to the more contested criteria of faith and love, protecting the doctrine of things indifferent from perversions that would undermine Christian liberty.
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Definitions of obedience in Paradise regainedLearmonth, Nicola K, n/a January 2007 (has links)
The thesis has two parts. Part One surveys the debate on how to define Christian obedience and Milton�s prose contributions to that discourse. In the century leading up to Milton�s prose writings there was much debate in England over how to define spiritual obedience. Civil authorities argued that matters of religion fell within state jurisdiction and that an individual�s spiritual obedience should be subject to outward scrutiny and external control; but these definitions were contested by Protestant reformers. Chapter One traces the issue up to Milton�s contributions.
Chapter Two traces Milton�s thinking about obedience, spiritual and secular, through his own prose writings: Milton defines obedience as a responsible freedom which requires continual critical assessment of authority. In reaction to the political and ecclesiastical developments of his own time, Milton places increasing emphasis on the role of the individual in defining and expressing obedience to God by means of scriptural study and open discussion. Milton argues that liberty is a necessary pre-condition for giving true obedience to God, and this idea comes to the fore in the later prose tracts, which respond to political and ecclesiastical developments that Milton interpreted as threatening the individual�s liberty of conscience.
Part Two examines Paradise Regained (1671), in which Milton advances his interpretation of obedience through his characterisation of the Son of God. Chapter Three shows how Milton links those forms of Christian obedience which he rejects in his prose writing to either Satan or satanic influence. Through his depiction of the Son�s responses to Satan, Milton indicates that Satan�s versions of obedience are designed to distract the Son, and any other believer, from giving proper obedience to God.
Chapter Four traces how Milton�s depiction of the Son of God demonstrates his understanding of the right reasons for, and ways of, giving proper obedience to God. The Son�s firm obedience is a state of mind and comprises knowledge of God through scriptural study, conversation and meditation. This exemplary obedience is motivated by an appreciation for and desire to participate in God�s glory (ie., Creation), and Milton indicates that it is this appreciation of divine glory that enables the Son of God to successfully resist Satan�s temptations.
Chapter Five examines Milton�s final episode, the pinnacle temptation, in terms of the obedience which he has approved throughout the poem. This chapter addresses Milton�s handling of the reader�s expectations for this scene, and the symbolic language and setting of the pinnacle episode. Unlike any other writers on the temptations in the wilderness, Milton invests the Son�s victory (and Satan�s defeat) on the pinnacle with symbolic power by depicting the Son standing in firm obedience to God. Thus Milton presents his reader with the definitive expression of humanity�s obedience to God: the Son�s stand is a symbolic return to the "Godlike erect" stance ascribed to prelapsarian humanity in Paradise Lost (PL, IV.289), and with this firm, upright obedience Milton shows the rest of humanity how to regain Paradise.
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"Wand'ring this Woody Maze": Deciphering the Obscure Wilderness of Paradise RegainedJohnson, Brooke 01 May 2020 (has links)
The setting of Milton’s great sequel is puzzling, being called a desert and a “waste wild” (IV. 523) repeatedly and at the same time including descriptions of protective oaks and woody mazes. These conflicting descriptions conjure up several questions: In which environment does the epic take place? Because Milton is so detailed in his adaptations of biblical narrative the inclusion of trees is quite perplexing. While he does tend to expand biblical narrative quite frequently – e.g. Paradise Lost – he rarely initiates a change without just cause. The crux of this particular change centers on what this just cause could be. How does the addition of a few trees change the overall effect of Milton’s brief epic? This thesis thus attempts to find further meaning in Paradise Regained’s setting by exploring three possibilities for this just cause while uncovering what the concept of a tree/forest means in early modern England.
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The concept of discipline : poetry, rhetoric, and the Church in the works of John MiltonWhite, Edmund C. January 2013 (has links)
Discipline was an enduring concept in the works of John Milton (1608-1674), yet its meaning shifted over the course of his career: initially he held that it denoted ecclesiastical order, but gradually he turned to representing it as self-willed pious action. My thesis examines this transformation by analysing Milton’s complex engagement in two distinct periods: the 1640s and the 1660s-70s. In Of Reformation (1641), Milton echoed popular contemporary demands for a reformation of church discipline, but also asserted through radical literary experimentation that poetry could discipline the nation too (Chapter 1). Reflecting his dislike for intolerant Presbyterians in Parliament and the Westminster Assembly, the two versions of The Doctrine and Discipline of Divorce (1643 and 1644) reconsider discipline as a moral imperative for all men, rooted in domestic liberty (Chapter 2). Although written long after this period, the long poetry that Milton composed after the Restoration reveals his continued interrogation of the concept. The invocations of the term ‘discipline’ by Milton’s angels in Paradise Lost (1667) sought to encourage dissenting readers to faithfulness and co-operation (Chapter 3). Paradise Regained and Samson Agonistes (1671) advance the concept in the language of ‘piety,’ emphasising that ‘pious hearts’ are the precondition for godly action in opposition to contemporary Anglican ‘holy living’ (Chapter 4). In analysing Milton’s shifting concept of discipline, my thesis contributes to scholarship by showing his sensitivity to contemporary mainstream religious ideas, outlining the Christian—as opposed to republican or Stoic—notions of praxis that informed his ethics, and emphasising the disciplinary aspect of his doctrinal thought. Overall, it holds that in discipline, as word and concept, Milton expressed his faith in the capacity of writing to change its reader, morally and spiritually.
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[en] DÉBUT DE SIÈCLE: LIFE AND HISTORY IN THE MAGIC MONTAIN, MRS. DALLOWAY AND TIME REGAINED / [pt] DÉBUT DE SIÈCLE: VIDA E HISTÓRIA EM A MONTANHA MÁGICA, MRS. DALLOWAY E O TEMPO RECUPERADOJONAS THOBIAS DA SILVA DIAS MARTINI 11 May 2021 (has links)
[pt] Esta dissertação se dedica a analisar os romances A montanha mágica de Thomas Mann, Mrs. Dalloway de Virginia Woolf, e O tempo recuperado de Marcel Proust, em relação aos momentos históricos da Primeira Guerra Mundial (1914-1918), que integra as suas narrativas, e do pós-Grande Guerra, quando os referidos volumes foram publicados – respectivamente em 1924, 1925 e 1927. Ela contém a hipótese de que esses textos não apenas participam do início de uma inflexão inesperada da ideia de progresso da História tal como vinha sendo delineada, sobretudo, entre os séculos XVIII e XIX e posta em questão a partir da guerra, como sobre ela produzem efeitos de ultrapassagem através da capacidade narrativa, entendida, por sua vez e de diferentes maneiras, como sinônimo de vida. Diante da amplitude possibilitada pela literatura ficcional, a seguinte investigação propõe uma consideração das noções de Vida e de História presentes nas obras selecionadas não apenas para estudar um período histórico de mudanças nas concepções das mesmas como também para provocar as narrativas do presente. / [en] This dissertation analyzes the novels The magic mountain by Thomas Mann, Mrs. Dalloway by Virginia Woolf, and Time regained by Marcel Proust, linked to the historical moments of the First World War (1914-1918), which integrates its narratives, and of the post-Great War, when these volumes were published – respectively in 1924, 1925 and 1927. It contains the hypothesis that these texts participate in an inflection of the idea of Historical progress as it had been outlined, above all, between the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, and they overtake this inflexion by the narrative capacity, understood as a synonym of life. Given the breadth made possible by fictional literature, the investigation proposes a consideration of the notions of Life and History present in the works not only to study a historic period of changes in their conceptions but also to provoke the narratives of the present.
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Learning and the Knowledge of Faith in Paradise RegainedRyan, Patrick R. (Patrick Russell) 12 1900 (has links)
In Book IV of Paradise Regained, Satan tempts Christ by offering him the learning of the Greek philosophers, poets, and orators. Christ's response is a vehement denigration of Greek literature, which seems to contradict the praise of the classics found in Milton's prose works of the 1640s. Interpreting the condemnation of Greek learning in Paradise Regained as a modification of the poet's early attitudes, the present study examines the biographical, political, theological, and scientific factors which influenced Milton's thought and altered his opinions on the value of classical literature.
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"Sad friends of Truth": Reading and Restoration in John Milton's 1671 poemsDyck, Jonathan A Unknown Date
No description available.
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