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  1. Milton and gender
    Published: 2004
    Publisher:  Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, U.K

    Introduction:Milton's gendered subjects /Catherine Gimelli Martin --PART I. MASCULINITY, DIVORCE, AND MISOGYNY IN MILTON'S PROSE --The gender of civic virtue /Gina Hausknecht --The aesthetics of divorce: "masculinism," idolatry, and poetic authority... more

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    Hochschule Aalen, Bibliothek
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    Hochschule Esslingen, Bibliothek
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    Saarländische Universitäts- und Landesbibliothek
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    Universitätsbibliothek der Eberhard Karls Universität
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    Introduction:Milton's gendered subjects /Catherine Gimelli Martin --PART I. MASCULINITY, DIVORCE, AND MISOGYNY IN MILTON'S PROSE --The gender of civic virtue /Gina Hausknecht --The aesthetics of divorce: "masculinism," idolatry, and poetic authority in Tetrachordon and Paradise Lost /James Grantham Turner --Dalila, misogyny, and Milton's Christian liberty of divorce /Catherine Gimelli Martin --PART II. THE GENDERED SUBJECTS OF MILTON'S MAJOR POEMS --The profession of virginity in A maske presented at Ludlow Castle /William Shullenberger --The genders of God and the redemption of the flesh in Paradise lost /Marshall Grossman --Transported touch: the fruit of marriage in Paradise lost /John Rogers --The experience of defeat: Milton and some female contemporaries /Elizabeth M. Sauer --Samson and surrogacy /Amy Boesky --"I was his nursling once": nation, lactation, and the Hebraic in Samson Agonistes /Rachel Trubowitz --"The Jewish Question" and "The woman question" in Samson Agonistes: gender, religion, and nation /Achsah Guibbory --PART III. GENDERED SUBJECTIVITY IN MILTON'S LITERARY HISTORY --George Elliot as a "Miltonist": marriage and Milton in Middlemarch /Dayton Haskin --Saying it with flowers: Jane Giraud's ecofeminist Paradise Lost (1846) /Wendy Furman-Adams,Virginia James Tufte --Woolf's allusion to Comus in The voyage out /Lisa Low. Milton's contempt for women has been accepted as fact by many critics. This book re-evaluates this claim by analysing his major poems, his four divorce tracts, and the responses of female readers. Together, these essays provide a fresh perspective on all aspects of gender in Milton's work

     

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