Barbarous Dissonance and Images of Voice in Milton's EpicsElizabeth Sauer brings a new perspective to Milton scholarship through her examination of the relative status and authority of the multiple narrative voices in Paradise Lost and Paradise Regained. She argues that Milton's epics accommodate a variety of interpretive voices, episodes, and dramatic and discursive exchanges that resist the monological containment of the poems' dominant narratives. Sauer investigates the texts' discursive practices and the politics of their orchestration of voice, exploring the ways in which Milton's multivocal poems interrogated dominant structures of authority in the seventeenth century and constructed in their place a community of voices characterized by dissonances. She incorporates different critical responses to Milton's texts into her argument as a way of contextualizing her own historically engaged approach. By injecting concepts such as multiple narrators and genres, open forms, strategic deferrals, and the exchanges between the poetic voices and discourses of the early modern period, Sauer tells us something about how the poems spoke to their own time as well as how they may be recuperated to speak to ours. |
Contents
The Voices and Politics of Nimrod | 14 |
Critical Interventions | 39 |
Task of Raphael Satan and the PoetNarrator | 62 |
The Gendered Hierarchy of Discourse | 87 |
Colonialism and Censorship | 111 |
The Voices of Nebuchadnezzar in Paradise Regained | 136 |
191 | |
209 | |
Other editions - View all
Barbarous Dissonance and Images of Voice in Milton's Epics Elizabeth Sauer No preview available - 1996 |
Common terms and phrases
Adam and Eve Adam's Agonistes argues authority biblical book 12 book 9 censorship challenged chap chapter characterized characters Christopher Hill classical commonwealth confusion confusion of tongues contemporary context conversation creation account creation story critical cultural describes devils dialogue discourse dissonance divine dominant earth Eikonoklastes English epic Eve's fall feminized gender Genesis story heaven hierarchical human identified identity interpretation John John Milton king kingship language linguistic literary Michael Milton monarchy multiple multivocal narcissism narrative narrator nature Nebuchadnezzar Nimrod offers pamphlet Paradise Lost Paradise Regained paradoxical poem poem's poet poet-narrator poet-narrator's poetic poetry political postlapsarian prophecy prophetic Prose Raphael reader reading reemplotment relationship Renaissance resists Restoration reveals rhetoric role royalist Rump Satan scene seventeenth seventeenth-century Sin's social soliloquy Son's speakers speech T.S. Eliot temptation thee thir thou tion tive tongues tower of Babel tragic truth tyranny verbal verse voice words
References to this book
Milton and the Rabbis: Hebraism, Hellenism, & Christianity Jeffrey S. Shoulson No preview available - 2001 |