Description
Book SynopsisThree and a half centuries after Paradise Lost and Paradise Regain'd were written, do Milton's epic poems still resonate with contemporary concerns? In Milton's Leveller God, David Williams advances a progressive and democratic interpretation of Milton's epics to show they are more relevant than ever. Exploring two blind spots in the critical tradition the failure to read Milton's poetry as drama and to recognize his depictions of heaven's political and social evolution Williams reads Milton's great argument as a rejection of social hierarchy and of patriarchal government that is more attuned to the radical political thought developed by the Levellers during the English Revolution. He traces echoes between Milton's texts and thousands of pages of Leveller writings that advocated for popular rule, extended suffrage, and religious tolerance, arguing that Milton's God is still the unacknowledged ground of popular sovereignty. Williams demonstrates that Milton's Leveller sympathies, expr
Trade Review"This beautifully written book is one that all scholars of Milton will have no choice but to read and contend with." John Rogers, Yale University
"Williams's elegant prose recreates for a modern reader the excitement that must have been part of what politics was like in that brief period when England was a republic in the middle of the seventeenth century. Putting free will at the centre of Milton's thought is a common enough tactic among Milton scholars, but here, in Williams's meticulous account, it means revising his theology to the point that God himself (or itself) becomes a Leveller. Heaven is political." Times Literary Supplement
"[Milton's Leveller God] is a powerful corrective to the assumption that Milton's thought and poetic practice was not significantly shaped by the populist, progressive, and hopeful political thought of the Levellers. John Foxe's 'Acts and Monuments' supplied Milton with the definitive print model of how readers can be gathered – in their own acts of 'labourious gathering' – into a Leveller community of equals." Studies in English Literature
"When Williams turns to the text of 'Paradise Lost,' no reader will be unmoved, since he presents perhaps the most grandly revisionist reading the poem since Fish's 'Surprised by Sin.'" Renaissance and Reformation