
Paradise Lost and the Romantic Reader
Lucy Newlyn(Author)
Oxford University Press
Published on 22. March 2001
Book
Paperback/Softback
303 pages
978-0-19-924258-0 (ISBN)
Description
Was Milton on the side of the angels or the devils? Was he republican or anti-republican, feminist or misogynist? Did he value innocence or experience?
Lucy Newlyn shows how the Romantic reader responds, in complex and often paradoxical ways, to multiple ambiguities inherent in the very language of Paradise Lost. She examines ambivalent allusions to Satan and God, in responses to the French Revolution (Coleridge and Wordsworth), in studies of the origin of evil (Godwin, Blake, the Shelleys), in accounts of the creative imagination; and looks at how Eve pervades representations of female sexuality (Byron and Keats). The book culminates in a chapter on Blake's Milton, and prose writers such as De Quincey, Lamb, Wollstonecraft, and Hazlitt are also considered.
Milton emerges as a poet of indeterminacy, not an authority figure, whose concern with the problematic issues of revolution and religion, sexuality and selfhood, make his writing relevant and accessible.
Lucy Newlyn shows how the Romantic reader responds, in complex and often paradoxical ways, to multiple ambiguities inherent in the very language of Paradise Lost. She examines ambivalent allusions to Satan and God, in responses to the French Revolution (Coleridge and Wordsworth), in studies of the origin of evil (Godwin, Blake, the Shelleys), in accounts of the creative imagination; and looks at how Eve pervades representations of female sexuality (Byron and Keats). The book culminates in a chapter on Blake's Milton, and prose writers such as De Quincey, Lamb, Wollstonecraft, and Hazlitt are also considered.
Milton emerges as a poet of indeterminacy, not an authority figure, whose concern with the problematic issues of revolution and religion, sexuality and selfhood, make his writing relevant and accessible.
Reviews / Votes
the book will probably be consulted more often than read as a whole ... any reader tolerant of the Blakean angle of vision will find it fruitfully employed in this study. * E.D. Hill, Mount Holyoke College, Choice, June '93 * Review from previous edition 'the book will probably be consulted more often than read as a whole ... any reader tolerant of the Blakean angle of vision will find it fruitfully employed in this study'E.D. Hill, Mount Holyoke College, Choice, June '93
More details
Language
English
Place of publication
Oxford
United Kingdom
Target group
Professional and scholarly
Illustrations
halftone
Dimensions
Height: 234 mm
Width: 156 mm
Thickness: 17 mm
Weight
483 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-19-924258-0 (9780199242580)
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Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
Additional editions

Lucy Newlyn
'Paradise Lost' and the Romantic Reader
Book
12/1992
Clarendon Press
€195.70
Shipment within 15-20 days
Person
Lucy Newlyn is Lecturer in English, St Edmund Hall, Oxford, and author of Reading, Writing, and Romanticism and Coleridge, Wordsworth, and the Language of Allusion.
Content
EDITIONS AND ABBREVIATIONS USED; INTRODUCTION; SELECT BIBLIOGRAPHY; INDEX