Description

Book Synopsis
Appearing in tandem with the publication of an authoritative text of the first edition of John Milton's Paradise Lost, these insightful essays by ten Miltonists establish the significant differences between the text, context, and effect of the poem's first edition (1667) and those of the now-standard second edition. In bringing together essays by various hands, editors Michael Lieb and John T. Shawcross seek to map what may be termed a new frontier in Milton studies, one that acknowledges the importance of what Milton himself considered to be the work of a lifetime when he offered Paradise Lost to readers in 1667. While the scholars writing here do not claim that the first edition of Milton's epic should be viewed as supplanting the second and later editions, they do seek to demonstrate the importance of coming to terms with the original ten-book edition both as a work with its own identity and value and as a source of fundamental insight into the nature of the editions that would follow in its wake. Paradise Lost cannot be fully understood without an awareness of the dynamic and ever-changing nature of the forces through which it made its first and subsequent appearances in the world at large.

Table of Contents

Preface

1. Back to the Future: Paradise Lost 1667

Michael Lieb

2. “More and More Perceiving”: Paraphernalia and Purpose in Paradise Lost, 1668, 1669

Joseph Wittreich

3. Simmons’s Shell Game: The Six Title Pages of Paradise Lost

Stephen B. Dobranski

4. Milton’s 1667 Paradise Lost in Its Historical and Literary Contexts

Achsah Guibbory

5. The Emperor’s New Clothes: The Royal Fashion of Satan and Charles II

Richard J. DuRocher

6. “Now let us play”: Paradise Lost and Pleasure Gardens in Restoration London

Laura Lunger Knoppers

7. “[N]ew Laws thou see’st impos’d”: Milton’s Dissenting Angels and the Clarendon Code, 1661–65

Bryan Adams Hampton

8. Poetic Justice: Plato’s Republic in Paradise Lost (1667)

Phillip J. Donnelly

9. The Mysterious Darkness of Unknowing: Paradise Lost and the God Beyond Names

Michael Bryson

10. “That which by creation first brought forth Light out of darkness!”: Paradise Lost, First Edition

John T. Shawcross

Notes

About the Contributors

Index

Paradise Lost A Poem Written in Ten Books

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A Paperback / softback by Michael Lieb, John T. Shawcross

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    View other formats and editions of Paradise Lost A Poem Written in Ten Books by Michael Lieb

    Publisher: Pennsylvania State University Press
    Publication Date: 14/03/2023
    ISBN13: 9780271095462, 978-0271095462
    ISBN10: 0271095466

    Description

    Book Synopsis
    Appearing in tandem with the publication of an authoritative text of the first edition of John Milton's Paradise Lost, these insightful essays by ten Miltonists establish the significant differences between the text, context, and effect of the poem's first edition (1667) and those of the now-standard second edition. In bringing together essays by various hands, editors Michael Lieb and John T. Shawcross seek to map what may be termed a new frontier in Milton studies, one that acknowledges the importance of what Milton himself considered to be the work of a lifetime when he offered Paradise Lost to readers in 1667. While the scholars writing here do not claim that the first edition of Milton's epic should be viewed as supplanting the second and later editions, they do seek to demonstrate the importance of coming to terms with the original ten-book edition both as a work with its own identity and value and as a source of fundamental insight into the nature of the editions that would follow in its wake. Paradise Lost cannot be fully understood without an awareness of the dynamic and ever-changing nature of the forces through which it made its first and subsequent appearances in the world at large.

    Table of Contents

    Preface

    1. Back to the Future: Paradise Lost 1667

    Michael Lieb

    2. “More and More Perceiving”: Paraphernalia and Purpose in Paradise Lost, 1668, 1669

    Joseph Wittreich

    3. Simmons’s Shell Game: The Six Title Pages of Paradise Lost

    Stephen B. Dobranski

    4. Milton’s 1667 Paradise Lost in Its Historical and Literary Contexts

    Achsah Guibbory

    5. The Emperor’s New Clothes: The Royal Fashion of Satan and Charles II

    Richard J. DuRocher

    6. “Now let us play”: Paradise Lost and Pleasure Gardens in Restoration London

    Laura Lunger Knoppers

    7. “[N]ew Laws thou see’st impos’d”: Milton’s Dissenting Angels and the Clarendon Code, 1661–65

    Bryan Adams Hampton

    8. Poetic Justice: Plato’s Republic in Paradise Lost (1667)

    Phillip J. Donnelly

    9. The Mysterious Darkness of Unknowing: Paradise Lost and the God Beyond Names

    Michael Bryson

    10. “That which by creation first brought forth Light out of darkness!”: Paradise Lost, First Edition

    John T. Shawcross

    Notes

    About the Contributors

    Index

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