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Engendering the Fall - John Milton and Seventeenth-Century Women Writers (Hardcover)
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Engendering the Fall - John Milton and Seventeenth-Century Women Writers (Hardcover)
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Total price: R1,581
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Engendering the Fall John Milton and Seventeenth-Century Women
Writers Shannon Miller "This is an ambitious book, tackling some
central issues in the study of seventeenth-century literature and
history, and the first book to bring interpretations of the Fall
story by Milton and his female contemporaries, from the Jacobean
period to the end of the century, into a sustained
dialogue."--David Norbrook, University of Oxford ""Engendering the
Fall" enriches our view of Milton, of women writers, and of the
literature of gender and statecraft."--"TLS" The narrative of the
Garden of Eden infused seventeenth-century political thought no
less than it reflected attitudes toward the relationship between
the sexes. Within the contemporary debate over political
legitimacy, theorists who supported or questioned the monarchy
turned explicitly to the narrative of the Garden of Eden and Adam
and Eve to articulate their theories of governmental authority.
Engaging this foundational relationship between gendered
interpersonal and governmental organization, Shannon Miller turns
to a body of texts produced in England that replot the story of the
Garden. She sets a series of writings by women into conversation
with the period's most important poetic rendering of the Fall,
Milton's "Paradise Lost," to illustrate how significant gender was
to accounts of social and political organization, and to
demonstrate how the Garden narrative plots the role of gender. Her
multidirectional and multilayered conversation between numerous
seventeenth-century women--such as Aemilia Lanyer, Rachel Speght,
Lucy Hutchinson, Margaret Cavendish, and Mary Chudleigh--and
Milton's Genesis epic crystallizes the interplay between the
narrative of the Fall, the organization of political structures,
and the extent to which both were shaped by cultural debates over
the role of women. Shannon Miller is Associate Professor of English
at Temple University and the author of "Invested with Meaning: The
Raleigh Circle in the New World," also published by the University
of Pennsylvania Press. 2008 288 pages 6 x 9 ISBN 978-0-8122-4086-3
Cloth $65.00s 42.50 World Rights Literature, Women's/Gender Studies
Short copy: "Engendering the Fall" argues that early
seventeenth-century women's writing influenced "Paradise Lost,"
while later seventeenth-century texts reworked central aspects of
Milton's epic in order to reconfigure the politically resonant
gendered hierarchy laid out by the story of the Fall.
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