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  1. Milton’s scriptural theology
    confronting de doctrina christiana
    Autor*in: Hale, John K.
    Erschienen: [2019]; © 2019
    Verlag:  Arc Humanities Press, Leeds

    Milton spoke of ‹i›De Doctrina‹/i› as "my best and most precious possession." Through close reading of the Latin itself, John K. Hale assesses the work and its aim, its degrees of success and its by-products, as these reveal Milton at his "personal... mehr

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    Milton spoke of ‹i›De Doctrina‹/i› as "my best and most precious possession." Through close reading of the Latin itself, John K. Hale assesses the work and its aim, its degrees of success and its by-products, as these reveal Milton at his "personal best." While to historians or methodologists of theology his best might not seem the very best ever, this work was unutterably precious to Milton, and close reading reveals the personal dimension of Milton’s theology and the passion and energy of his mind in its acts of thought

     

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    Sprache: Englisch
    Medientyp: Ebook
    Format: Online
    ISBN: 9781641893411
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    Schriftenreihe: Borderlines           
    Schlagworte: Antitrinitarianism; John Milton; Neo-Latin literature; Paradise Lost; Reformation Theology; heterodoxy; LITERARY CRITICISM / Modern / 17th Century; Biblische Theologie
    Weitere Schlagworte: Milton, John (1608-1674): De doctrina christiana
    Umfang: 1 Online-Ressource (xii, 142 Seiten)
  2. Paradise Lost
  3. Heroic Awe
    The Sublime and the Remaking of Renaissance Epic
    Autor*in: Lehtonen, Kelly
    Erschienen: 2022; ©2022
    Verlag:  University of Toronto Press, Toronto

    During the Renaissance, the most renowned model of epic poetry was Virgil’s Aeneid, a poem promoting an influential concept of heroism based on the commitment to one’s nation and gods. However, Longinus’ theory of the sublime – newly recovered during... mehr

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    During the Renaissance, the most renowned model of epic poetry was Virgil’s Aeneid, a poem promoting an influential concept of heroism based on the commitment to one’s nation and gods. However, Longinus’ theory of the sublime – newly recovered during the Renaissance – contradicted this absolute devotion to nation as a marker of religious piety. Heroic Awe explores how Renaissance epic poetry used the sublime to challenge the assumption that epic heroism was primarily about civic duty and glorification of state. The book demonstrates how the significant investment of Renaissance epic poetry in Longinus’ theory of the sublime reshaped the genre of epic. To do so, Kelly Lehtonen examines the intersection between the Longinian sublime and early modern Protestant and Catholic discourses in Renaissance poems such as the Gerusalemme Liberata, Les Semaines, The Faerie Queene, and Paradise Lost. In illuminating the role of Longinus along with that of religious discourses, Heroic Awe offers a new perspective on epic heroism in Renaissance epic poetry, redefining heroism as the capacity to be overwhelmed emotionally, psychologically, and spiritually by encounters with divine glory. In considering the links between religion, the sublime, and epic, the book aims to shed new light on several core topics in early modern studies, including epic heroism, Renaissance philosophy, theories of emotion, and the psychology of religion

     

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    Sprache: Englisch
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    Format: Online
    ISBN: 9781487545406
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    Schlagworte: Epic poetry, European; Heroic virtue in literature; Sublime, The, in literature; LITERARY CRITICISM / Renaissance
    Weitere Schlagworte: Du Bartas; Gerusalemme Liberata; Les Semaines; Longinus; Milton; Paradise Lost; Reformation; Renaissance epic; Renaissance poetry; Spenser; Sublime; Tasso; The Faerie Queene; heroism; religion and spirituality
    Umfang: 1 Online-Ressource (252 p.), 2 b&w illustrations
  4. Peopling the world
    representing human mobility from Milton to Malthus
    Erschienen: [2020]; © 2020
    Verlag:  University of Pennsylvania Press, Philadelphia

    A compelling study of views about population and demographic mobility in the British long eighteenth centuryIn John Milton's Paradise Lost of 1667, Adam and Eve are promised they will produce a "race to fill the world," a thought that consoles them... mehr

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    A compelling study of views about population and demographic mobility in the British long eighteenth centuryIn John Milton's Paradise Lost of 1667, Adam and Eve are promised they will produce a "race to fill the world," a thought that consoles them even after the trauma of the fall. By 1798, the idea that the world would one day be entirely filled by people had become, in Thomas Malthus's hands, a nightmarish vision. In Peopling the World, Charlotte Sussman asks how and why this shift took place. How did Britain's understanding of the value of reproduction, the vacancy of the planet, and the necessity of moving people around to fill its empty spaces change? Sussman addresses these questions through readings of texts by Malthus, Milton, Swift, Defoe, Goldsmith, Sir Walter Scott, Mary Shelley, and others, and by placing these authors in the context of debates about scientific innovation, emigration, cultural memory, and colonial settlement.Sussman argues that a shift in thinking about population and mobility occurred in the third quarter of the eighteenth century. Before that point, both political and literary texts were preoccupied with "useless" populations that could be made useful by being dispersed over Britain's domestic and colonial territories; after 1760, a concern with the depopulation caused by emigration began to take hold. She explains this change in terms of the interrelated developments of a labor theory of value, a new idea of national identity after the collapse of Britain's American empire, and a move from thinking of reproduction as a national resource to thinking of it as an individual choice. She places Malthus at the end of this history because he so decisively moved thinking about population away from a worldview in which there was always more space to be filled and toward the temporal inevitability of the whole world filling up with people

     

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  5. Das Satanssturzmotiv in der Englischen Literatur
    ein historischer Längsschnitt im Kontext von John Miltons Paradise Lost
    Autor*in: Oppermann, Eva
    Erschienen: [2018]; © 2018
    Verlag:  Kassel University Press, Kassel

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  6. "Schlangewandelnd"
    Geschichten vom Fall bei Milton und Goethe
    Erschienen: 1997

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    Quelle: Leibniz-Zentrum für Literatur- und Kulturforschung
    Medientyp: Teil eines Buches (Kapitel)
    Übergeordneter Titel: In: Von der Natur zur Kunst zurück : Neue Beiträge zur Goethe-Forschung. (Gotthart Wunberg zum 65. Geburtstag) / Hrsg. von Moritz Baßler, Christoph Brecht u. Dirk Niefanger. - Tübingen, 1997; S. 79 - 94
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    Weitere Schlagworte: Milton, John: Paradise Lost; Goethe, Johann Wolfgang von: Prometheus
  7. Possible knowledge
    the literary forms of early modern science
    Erschienen: 2023
    Verlag:  University of Pennsylvania Press, Philadelphia

    The Renaissance, scholars have long argued, was a period beset by the loss of philosophical certainty. In Possible Knowledge, Debapriya Sarkar argues for the pivotal role of literature--what early moderns termed poesie--in the dynamic intellectual... mehr

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    The Renaissance, scholars have long argued, was a period beset by the loss of philosophical certainty. In Possible Knowledge, Debapriya Sarkar argues for the pivotal role of literature--what early moderns termed poesie--in the dynamic intellectual culture of this era of profound incertitude. Revealing how problems of epistemology are inextricable from questions of literary form, Sarkar offers a defense of poiesis, or literary making, as a vital philosophical endeavor.Working across a range of genres, Sarkar theorizes "possible knowledge" as an intellectual paradigm crafted in and through literary form. Sixteenth- and seventeenth-century writers such as Spenser, Bacon, Shakespeare, Cavendish, and Milton marshalled the capacious concept of the "possible," defined by Philip Sidney as what "may be and should be," to construct new theories of physical and metaphysical reality. These early modern thinkers mobilized the imaginative habits of thought constitutive to major genres of literary writing--including epic, tragedy, romance, lyric, and utopia--in order to produce knowledge divorced from historical truth and empirical fact by envisioning states of being untethered from "nature" or reality.Approaching imaginative modes such as hypothesis, conjecture, prediction, and counterfactuals as instruments of possible knowledge, Sarkar exposes how the speculative allure of the "possible" lurks within scientific experiment, induction, and theories of probability. In showing how early modern literary writing sought to grapple with the challenge of forging knowledge in an uncertain, perhaps even incomprehensible world, Possible Knowledge also highlights its most audacious intellectual ambition: its claim that while natural philosophy, or what we today term science, might explain the physical world, literature could remake reality. Enacting a history of ideas that centers literary studies, Possible Knowledge suggests that what we have termed a history of science might ultimately be a history of the imagination

     

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  8. Peopling the world
    representing human mobility from Milton to Malthus
    Erschienen: [2020]; © 2020
    Verlag:  University of Pennsylvania Press, Philadelphia

    A compelling study of views about population and demographic mobility in the British long eighteenth centuryIn John Milton's Paradise Lost of 1667, Adam and Eve are promised they will produce a "race to fill the world," a thought that consoles them... mehr

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    A compelling study of views about population and demographic mobility in the British long eighteenth centuryIn John Milton's Paradise Lost of 1667, Adam and Eve are promised they will produce a "race to fill the world," a thought that consoles them even after the trauma of the fall. By 1798, the idea that the world would one day be entirely filled by people had become, in Thomas Malthus's hands, a nightmarish vision. In Peopling the World, Charlotte Sussman asks how and why this shift took place. How did Britain's understanding of the value of reproduction, the vacancy of the planet, and the necessity of moving people around to fill its empty spaces change? Sussman addresses these questions through readings of texts by Malthus, Milton, Swift, Defoe, Goldsmith, Sir Walter Scott, Mary Shelley, and others, and by placing these authors in the context of debates about scientific innovation, emigration, cultural memory, and colonial settlement.Sussman argues that a shift in thinking about population and mobility occurred in the third quarter of the eighteenth century. Before that point, both political and literary texts were preoccupied with "useless" populations that could be made useful by being dispersed over Britain's domestic and colonial territories; after 1760, a concern with the depopulation caused by emigration began to take hold. She explains this change in terms of the interrelated developments of a labor theory of value, a new idea of national identity after the collapse of Britain's American empire, and a move from thinking of reproduction as a national resource to thinking of it as an individual choice. She places Malthus at the end of this history because he so decisively moved thinking about population away from a worldview in which there was always more space to be filled and toward the temporal inevitability of the whole world filling up with people

     

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  9. Das Satanssturzmotiv in der englischen Literatur
    ein historischer Längsschnitt im Kontext von John Miltons Paradise lost
    Autor*in: Oppermann, Eva
    Erschienen: [2018]
    Verlag:  Kassel University Press, Kassel

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    Quelle: Verbundkataloge
    Sprache: Deutsch
    Medientyp: Buch (Monographie)
    ISBN: 9783737603867; 3737603863
    RVK Klassifikation: HK 1091
    DDC Klassifikation: Englische, altenglische Literaturen (820)
    Schlagworte: Englisch; Teufel <Motiv>; Literatur; Intertextualität
    Weitere Schlagworte: Englische Literatur; Intertextualität; John Milton; Paradise Lost; Satanssturzmotiv
    Umfang: IV, 416, 2, 3 Seiten, 21 cm, 550 g
  10. Literature in our Lives
    Talking about texts from Shakespeare to Philip Pullman
    Autor*in: Jacobs, Richard
    Erschienen: 2020
    Verlag:  Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group, New York

    This book recreates in written form seventeen of the most popular, frankly personal and engaging lectures on literature given by the award-winning teacher Richard Jacobs, who has been working with students for over forty years. This is a book written... mehr

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    This book recreates in written form seventeen of the most popular, frankly personal and engaging lectures on literature given by the award-winning teacher Richard Jacobs, who has been working with students for over forty years. This is a book written for students, whether starting their studies or more experienced, and also for all lovers of literature. At its heart is the conviction that reading, thinking about, and writing or talking about literature involves us all personally: texts talk to us intimately and urgently, inviting us to talk back, intervening in and changing our lives. These lectures discuss, in an open but richly informed way, a wide range of texts that are regularly studied and enjoyed. They model what it means to be excited about reading and studying literature, and how the study of literature can be life-changing - perhaps even with the effect of changing the lives of readers of this eloquent and remarkable book.

     

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    Sprache: Englisch
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    ISBN: 9780367189341; 9780367189310
    Weitere Identifier:
    9780367189341
    Schlagworte: Rezeption; Lektüre; Literatur; Englisch
    Weitere Schlagworte: LITERARY CRITICISM / European / General; LITERARY CRITICISM / American / General; A Tale of Two Cities; american literature; Beckett; Bronte; Charles Dickens; Chopin; Colonialism; C.S. Lewis; Dickenson; Dorian Gray; desire; Emma; early modern literature; Foucault; Freud; family values; Gaskell; George Eliot; Gilman; Great Expectations; gender; Hamlet; Hardy; Hawthorne; Henry James; In Search of Lost Time; Jacques Lacan; Jane Austen; Jane Eyre; Keats; King Lear; loss; Milton; Myth of the Fall; modernism; myth; Nightingale; Paradise Lost; Peter Greenway; Prospero’s Books; Proust; Psycho-Sexuality; Pullman; queer theory; Race; Republicanism; realism; Shakespeare; Sherlock Holmes; sexuality; The Awakening; The Fallen Woman; The Tempest; Tolstoy; To Autumn; Twelfth Night; victorian literature; Waiting for Godot; Woman in White; Wuthering Heights; women; 19th century literature
    Umfang: x, 199 Seiten, 345 grams.
    Bemerkung(en):

    Introduction; The myth of the Fall and its impact: Pullman, Lewis and others; Claribel’s story: a few thoughts on gender, race and colonialism in The Tempest; Wuthering Heights: myth and the wounds of loss; Beckett’s Waiting for Godot: transforming lives; Great Expectations: intertextualities, endings and life after plot; Emily Dickinson: ‘And then the windows failed’; Emma: rhetoric, irony and the reader’s assault course; Dorian Gray: ‘queering’ the text; The Fallen Woman: Emma Bovary and (many) others; Two transgressive American women: Kate Chopin, Charlotte Perkins Gilman; Hamlet / Lear: realism / modernism; John Keats: three (or is it two?) poems and thoughts on ‘late style’; Republicanism, regicide and ‘The Musgrave Ritual’; Jean Rhys: her texts from the 1930s; Twelfth Night: Dream-Gift; Please read Proust; Paradise Lost: radical politics, gender and education ;

  11. Approaches to Paradise lost
    the York tercentenary lectures
    Erschienen: 1968
    Verlag:  Arnold, London

    Freie Universität Berlin, Universitätsbibliothek
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    Quelle: Philologische Bibliothek, FU Berlin
    Sprache: Englisch
    Medientyp: Buch (Monographie)
    ISBN: 0713154187
    Auflage/Ausgabe: 1. publ.
    Schlagworte: Fall of man in literature
    Weitere Schlagworte: Milton, John (1608-1674) / Paradise lost; Milton, John <1608-1674>: Paradise Lost; Milton, John (1608-1674): Paradise lost
    Umfang: XII, 265 S., Ill., Notenbeisp.
  12. Sinister Aesthetics
    The Appeal of Evil in Early Modern English Literature
  13. Reading Paradise Lost
  14. Das Satanssturzmotiv in der Englischen Literatur
    ein historischer Längsschnitt im Kontext von John Miltons Paradise lost
    Autor*in: Oppermann, Eva
    Erschienen: [2018]
    Verlag:  Kassel University Press, Kassel

  15. Das Satanssturzmotiv in der Englischen Literatur
    Ein historischer Längsschnitt im Kontext von John Miltons Paradise Lost
  16. Approaches to Paradise lost
    the York tercentenary lectures
    Erschienen: 1968
    Verlag:  Arnold, London

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    ISBN: 0713154187
    Auflage/Ausgabe: 1. publ.
    Schlagworte: Fall of man in literature
    Weitere Schlagworte: Milton, John (1608-1674) / Paradise lost; Milton, John <1608-1674>: Paradise Lost; Milton, John (1608-1674): Paradise lost
    Umfang: XII, 265 S., Ill., Notenbeisp.
  17. John Milton
    pensée, mythe et structure dans le paradis perdu
    Autor*in: Himy, Armand
    Erschienen: 1977

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    ISBN: 2859390847
    RVK Klassifikation: HK 2576
    Schriftenreihe: Publications de l'Universite de Lille III
    Schlagworte: Fall of man in literature
    Weitere Schlagworte: Array
    Umfang: 525 S.
  18. Darkness Visible - A Resource for Studying Milton's 'Paradise Lost'
    Erschienen: 2010

    Teaching Materials ; le This website was composed by members of Christ's College, Cambridge, where Milton studied from 1625 to 1632. "'Darkness Visible' was put together specifically for those attempting their first or second reading of Paradise... mehr

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    Teaching Materials ; le This website was composed by members of Christ's College, Cambridge, where Milton studied from 1625 to 1632. "'Darkness Visible' was put together specifically for those attempting their first or second reading of Paradise Lost, whether at sixth form, at university or in private study. Our aim has been to discuss this challenging epic with an accessibility that will enable those new to Milton to familiarize themselves with the poet, his work and his themes, but without patronizing the reader or shying away from more difficult ideas. There is a variety of resources on offer for the teacher or student of Paradise Lost to explore: a plot summary, character descriptions, essays with suggestions for further reading, a biography of the poet, and a gallery of illustrations including some interactive images."

     

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    Sprache: Englisch
    Medientyp: Buch (Monographie)
    Format: Online
    Schlagworte: John Milton; Paradise Lost; English literature; 17th century; poet; author; epic poem; religon; religious context; illustration
    Bemerkung(en):

    Source: SUB

  19. [Milton, John] Milton in the Old Library
    = 400th Anniversary Exhibition
    Erschienen: 2010

    Virtual Exhibitions ; at "John Milton stands out among European poets for the ambition of Paradise Lost, his celebrated epic which retells the Biblical story of mankind's Fall. This exhibition, timed to celebrate the 400th anniversary of his birth,... mehr

    Niedersächsische Staats- und Universitätsbibliothek Göttingen
    AnglGuide

     

    Virtual Exhibitions ; at "John Milton stands out among European poets for the ambition of Paradise Lost, his celebrated epic which retells the Biblical story of mankind's Fall. This exhibition, timed to celebrate the 400th anniversary of his birth, traces the origins of Milton's poem in the turbulent currents of English history through which he lived. Although best known as a poet, Milton was also one of the seventeenth century's most controversial religious and political thinkers. Towards the end of his life, shut up in prison by the newly-restored monarch, Milton's fearless pursuit of personal liberty would have near-fatal consequences."

     

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    Quelle: Verbundkataloge
    Sprache: Englisch
    Medientyp: Buch (Monographie)
    Format: Online
    Schlagworte: John Milton; Paradise Lost; English literature; 17th century; poet; author; epic poem; biography
    Bemerkung(en):

    Source: SUB

  20. <<Das>> Satanssturzmotiv in der Englischen Literatur
    ein historischer Längsschnitt im Kontext von John Miltons Paradise Lost
    Autor*in: Oppermann, Eva
    Erschienen: [2018]; © 2018
    Verlag:  Kassel University Press, Kassel

    Erzbischöfliche Diözesan- und Dombibliothek
    uneingeschränkte Fernleihe, Kopie und Ausleihe
    Universitätsbibliothek Siegen
    uneingeschränkte Fernleihe, Kopie und Ausleihe
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    Quelle: Verbundkataloge
    Sprache: Deutsch
    Medientyp: Buch (Monographie)
    Format: Druck
    ISBN: 9783737603867; 3737603863
    Weitere Identifier:
    9783737603867
    DDC Klassifikation: Englische, altenglische Literaturen (820)
    Schlagworte: Englisch; Literatur; Teufel <Motiv>; Intertextualität; Geschichte 1667-2000
    Weitere Schlagworte: Englische Literatur; Intertextualität; John Milton; Paradise Lost; Satanssturzmotiv
    Umfang: IV, 416, 2, 3 Seiten, 21 cm, 550 g
  21. Literature in our Lives
    Talking about texts from Shakespeare to Philip Pullman
    Autor*in: Jacobs, Richard
    Erschienen: 2020
    Verlag:  Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group, New York

    This book recreates in written form seventeen of the most popular, frankly personal and engaging lectures on literature given by the award-winning teacher Richard Jacobs, who has been working with students for over forty years. This is a book written... mehr

    Landesbibliothekszentrum Rheinland-Pfalz / Pfälzische Landesbibliothek
    uneingeschränkte Fernleihe, Kopie und Ausleihe

     

    This book recreates in written form seventeen of the most popular, frankly personal and engaging lectures on literature given by the award-winning teacher Richard Jacobs, who has been working with students for over forty years. This is a book written for students, whether starting their studies or more experienced, and also for all lovers of literature. At its heart is the conviction that reading, thinking about, and writing or talking about literature involves us all personally: texts talk to us intimately and urgently, inviting us to talk back, intervening in and changing our lives. These lectures discuss, in an open but richly informed way, a wide range of texts that are regularly studied and enjoyed. They model what it means to be excited about reading and studying literature, and how the study of literature can be life-changing - perhaps even with the effect of changing the lives of readers of this eloquent and remarkable book

     

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    Quelle: Verbundkataloge
    Sprache: Englisch
    Medientyp: Buch (Monographie)
    Format: Druck
    ISBN: 9780367189341; 9780367189310
    Weitere Identifier:
    9780367189341
    Schlagworte: LITERARY CRITICISM / European / General; LITERARY CRITICISM / American / General; A Tale of Two Cities; american literature; Beckett; Bronte; Charles Dickens; Chopin; Colonialism; C.S. Lewis; Dickenson; Dorian Gray; desire; Emma; early modern literature; Foucault; Freud; family values; Gaskell; George Eliot; Gilman; Great Expectations; gender; Hamlet; Hardy; Hawthorne; Henry James; In Search of Lost Time; Jacques Lacan; Jane Austen; Jane Eyre; Keats; King Lear; loss; Milton; Myth of the Fall; modernism; myth; Nightingale; Paradise Lost; Peter Greenway; Prospero’s Books; Proust; Psycho-Sexuality; Pullman; queer theory; Race; Republicanism; realism; Shakespeare; Sherlock Holmes; sexuality; The Awakening; The Fallen Woman; The Tempest; Tolstoy; To Autumn; Twelfth Night; victorian literature; Waiting for Godot; Woman in White; Wuthering Heights; women; 19th century literature
    Umfang: x, 199 Seiten, 345 grams
    Bemerkung(en):

    Introduction; The myth of the Fall and its impact: Pullman, Lewis and others; Claribel’s story: a few thoughts on gender, race and colonialism in The Tempest; Wuthering Heights: myth and the wounds of loss; Beckett’s Waiting for Godot: transforming lives; Great Expectations: intertextualities, endings and life after plot; Emily Dickinson: ‘And then the windows failed’; Emma: rhetoric, irony and the reader’s assault course; Dorian Gray: ‘queering’ the text; The Fallen Woman: Emma Bovary and (many) others; Two transgressive American women: Kate Chopin, Charlotte Perkins Gilman; Hamlet / Lear: realism / modernism; John Keats: three (or is it two?) poems and thoughts on ‘late style’; Republicanism, regicide and ‘The Musgrave Ritual’; Jean Rhys: her texts from the 1930s; Twelfth Night: Dream-Gift; Please read Proust; Paradise Lost: radical politics, gender and education ;

  22. Peopling the world
    representing human mobility from Milton to Malthus
    Erschienen: [2020]
    Verlag:  University of Pennsylvania Press, Philadelphia

    "This book discusses human mobility from Milton to Malthus. Each chapter of focuses on a group of subjects vulnerable to coerced mobility: the landless poor (Chapter 1); the native Irish (Chapter 2); army veterans (Chapter 3); the rural poor... mehr

    Zugang:
    Verlag (lizenzpflichtig)
    Universitäts- und Landesbibliothek Sachsen-Anhalt / Zentrale
    keine Fernleihe

     

    "This book discusses human mobility from Milton to Malthus. Each chapter of focuses on a group of subjects vulnerable to coerced mobility: the landless poor (Chapter 1); the native Irish (Chapter 2); army veterans (Chapter 3); the rural poor displaced by enclosure (Chapter 4); the Scots (Chapter 5); humanity imagined under the pressure of pandemic (Chapter 6); and the poor again under the new Poor Laws of the 1830s (Chapter 7). The first two chapters provide complementary accounts of the intersection between population and mobility: the first focusing on legal and economic policy toward the poor in relation to Milton's Paradise Lost; the second on the emergent science of political arithmetic as critiqued by Swift in his writing about Ireland. The first focuses on people, the second on numbering. These two chapters, plus a third, make up the first conceptual half of the book. They look at the concern prevalent from the Restoration to the mid-eighteenth century, triggered by the seeming superfluity of British population, to find a way for persons thought useless to the state-the poor, the Irish, and army veterans-to become useful again, usually by deploying them to "vacant" colonial spaces. The next three chapters, centered on Goldsmith's The Deserted Village, Scott's The Heart of Midlothian, and Shelley's The Last Man, examine the shift in the second half of the eighteenth century to anxiety about depopulation and the effect of disease, murder, and dispossession on England's sense of its identity in relation to its empire. Finally, the book turns to the work of Thomas Malthus, positioning it as an epistemological watershed as it reconceptualized peopling as a problem of time rather than space-a problem of futurity rather than territory"--

     

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    Quelle: Verbundkataloge
    Sprache: Englisch
    Medientyp: Ebook
    Format: Online
    ISBN: 0812296893; 9780812296891
    Auflage/Ausgabe: First edition
    Schlagworte: English literature; Emigration and immigration in literature; Population in literature; Auswanderung; Einwanderung; Auswanderung <Motiv>; Bevölkerung <Motiv>; Littérature anglaise - 18e siècle - Histoire et critique; Émigration et immigration dans la littérature; Population dans la littérature; LITERARY CRITICISM - Modern - 18th century; British colonies; Emigration and immigration; Emigration and immigration in literature; English literature; Population; Population in literature; Criticism, interpretation, etc; History
    Weitere Schlagworte: Daniel Defoe; John Milton; Jonathan Swift; Mary Shelley; Oliver Goldsmith; Paradise Lost; Sir Walter Scott; The Heart of Midlothian; The Last Man; Thomas Malthus; essay on the principle of population; overpopulation; useless population
    Umfang: 1 Online-Ressource (281 pages)
    Bemerkung(en):

    Includes bibliographical references and index

    A Race to Fill the Earth: Mobility and Fecundity in Paradise Lost -- The Afterlives of Political Arithmetic in Defoe and Swift -- The Veteran's Tale: War, Mobile Populations, and National Identity -- Remembering the Population: Goldsmith and Migration -- The Emptiness at The Heart of Midlothian: Nation, Narration, and Population -- "Islanded in the World": Cultural Memory and Human Mobility in The Last Man -- Prospects of the Future: Malthus, Shelley, and Freedom of Movement.