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The Ruins of Allegory
Catherine Gimelli Martin
其他書名
Paradise Lost and the Metamorphosis of Epic Convention
出版
Duke University Press
, 1998
主題
Literary Criticism / General
Literary Criticism / European / English, Irish, Scottish, Welsh
Literary Criticism / Poetry
Literary Criticism / Subjects & Themes / General
Literary Criticism / Subjects & Themes / Historical Events
Poetry / General
Poetry / European / English, Irish, Scottish, Welsh
ISBN
9780822319894
0822319896
URL
http://books.google.com.hk/books?id=orN7OUnXakMC&hl=&source=gbs_api
EBook
SAMPLE
註釋
In this reexamination of the allegorical dimensions of
Paradise Lost
, Catherine Martin presents Milton's poem as a prophecy foretelling the end of one culture and its replacement by another. She argues that rather than merely extending the allegorical tradition as defined by Augustine, Dante, and Spenser, Milton has written a meta-allegory that stages a confrontation with an allegorical formalism that is either dead or no longer philosophically viable. By both critiquing and recasting the traditional form, Milton describes the transition to a new epoch that promises the possibility of human redemption in history.
Martin shows how
Paradise Lost
, written at the threshold of the enormous imaginative shift that accompanied the Protestant, scientific, and political revolutions of the seventeenth century, conforms to a prophetic baroque model of allegory similar to that outlined by Walter Benjamin. As she demonstrates, Milton's experimentation with baroque forms radically reformulates classical epic, medieval romance, and Spenserian allegory to allow for both a naturalistic, empirically responsible understanding of the universe and for an infinite and incomprehensible God. In this way, the resulting poetic world of
Paradise Lost
is like Milton's God, an allegorical "ruin" in which the divine is preserved but at the price of a loss of certainty. Also, as Martin suggests, the poem affirmatively anticipates modernity by placing the chief hope of human progress in the fully self-authored subject.
Maintaining a dialogue with a critical tradition that extends from Johnson and Coleridge to the best contemporary Milton scholarship, Martin sets
Paradise Lost
in both the early modern and the postmodern worlds.
Ruins of Allegory
will greatly interest all Milton scholars, as well as students of literary criticism and early modern studies.