Milton and the Ineffable

ISBN13: 9780199572625ISBN10: 0199572623 Hardback, 336 pages
Dec 2009,  In Stock

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Description

Milton and the Ineffable offers a comprehensive reassessment of Milton's poetic oeuvre in light of the literary and conceptual problem posed by the poet's attempt to put into words that which is unsayable and beyond representation. The struggle with the ineffability of sacred or transcendental subject matter in many ways defines Milton's triumphs as a poet, especially in Paradise Lost, and goes to the heart of the central critical debates to engage his readers over the centuries and decades. Taking an interdisciplinary conceptual approach, this study sheds fresh light on many of these debates by situating Milton's poetics of ineffability in the context of the intellectual cross-currents of Renaissance humanism and Protestant theology. The book plots an ongoing narrative in Milton's poetry about silence and ineffable mystery which forms the intellectual framework within which Milton continually shapes and reshapes his poetic vision of the created universe and the elect man's singular place within it. From the free paraphrase of Psalm 114 to Paradise Regained, the presence of the ineffable insinuates itself into Milton's poetry as both the catalyst and check for his poetic creativity, where the fear of silence and ineffable mystery on the one hand, and the yearning to lose himself and his readers in unspeakable rapture on the other, becomes a struggle for poetic self-determination and finally redemption.

Features

  • A fresh critical perspective on Milton's poetic oeuvre in the light of the ineffable, that which is unsayable and beyond representation
  • An interdisciplinary approach, combining surveys of philosophical and theological ideas in relation to literary questions of style and representation
  • Reopens many established critical debates about Milton's poems and offers new insights into them
  • Includes close readings of Milton's 1645 Poems, Paradise Lost, and his late poems

Product Details

336 pages; ISBN13: 978-0-19-957262-5ISBN10: 0-19-957262-3

About the Author(s)

Noam Reisner was born in Tel Aviv, Israel, in 1974, a dual British-Israeli national. He took his BA degree in English and Classics at Tel Aviv University and then proceeded to do graduate work in Renaissance English literature at Lady Margaret Hall, Oxford University. After completing his Oxford D.Phil, he was appointed Plumer Research Fellow at St. Anne's College where he continued with his research on early modern literature and undertook teaching for the college. In 2008 he was awarded the Alon Scholarship for young academic researchers from Israel's Council for Higher Education and returned to Israel, where he took up a lectureship in English at Tel Aviv University.

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