
Lady in the Labyrinth
Milton's Comus as Initiation
William Shullenberger(Author)
Fairleigh Dickinson University Press
Published on 1. November 2008
Book
Hardback
360 pages
978-1-61147-387-2 (ISBN)
Description
Modern literary scholarship has traced the ways in which a distinctly modern sense of selfhood and subjectivity, and of the individualist liberal society in which such a self takes shape, emerges from the drama and poetry of the early seventeenth century. John Milton, writer of the greatest long poem in English, Paradise Lost, takes up the challenge of modern character and social formation from Shakespeare and Donne and their contemporaries. He begins this task in his own early maturity, some thirty years before the publication of his great epic, with A Maske Presented at Ludlow Castle,I>, more commonly known as Comus. There has not been a major book-length study of Milton's Maske in the past twenty years, so Lady in the Labyrinth fills a major gap in Milton and Renaissance criticism. It comprehensively surveys, evaluates, and integrates recent and traditional criticism of Comus in the context of Milton's other work, while developing new directions for study, focusing anthropological and psychological analysis on the poem's characters and mythological dimensions. Parallels between the ritual elements of the Maske and the rites of passage of non-European cultures will widen the horizons of both canonically based and multiculturally engaged scholars and writers. The book's study of Milton's identification with his female hero, and his advocacy of womens ethical, sexual, and political autonomy, gives a jolt to ongoing debates about Milton and feminism. The first of Milton's heroes of Christian Liberty, the fifteen-year-old Lady who performs in his Maske, is also the first of his characters to act out this transformation of human identity. Lady in the Labyrinth treats Comus, first performed in 1634, as a rite of passage for its Lady, and for the emerging culture whose hopes are invested in her. Displaying in song, argument and dance such character qualities as inferiority, self-consciousness, flexibility, and independence, the Lady gives vital form to
Reviews / Votes
Penetrating psychological insight, acute literary analysis, and a lush framework of cultural reference make Lady in the Labyrinth an enlightening discovery throughout.... His interweaving of Milton's masque with Spenser's masque in Book III of The Faerie Queene warrants special notice for its extended illumination of both works. * Christianity and Literature * Indeed, the whole book is redolent of deep immersion in its subject, and of a passionate desire to make Milton's masque speak to contemporary society. * Milton Quarterly *More details
Language
English
Place of publication
Cranbury
United States
Publishing group
Associated University Presses
Target group
Professional and scholarly
Dimensions
Height: 243 mm
Width: 169 mm
Thickness: 25 mm
Weight
662 gr
ISBN-13
978-1-61147-387-2 (9781611473872)
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Schweitzer Classification
Person
William Shullenberger is professor of literature and Joseph Campbell Chair in the Humanities at Sarah Lawrence College.