The New England Milton: Literary Reception and Cultural Authority in the Early Republic

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Penn State Press, 1993 - 255 páginas

The New England Milton concentrates on the poet's place in the writings of the Unitarians and the Transcendentalists, especially Emerson, Thoreau, William Ellery Channing, Jones Very, Margaret Fuller, and Theodore Parker, and demonstrates that his reception by both groups was a function of their response as members of the New England elite to older and broader sociopolitical tensions in Yankee culture as it underwent the process of modernization. For Milton and his writings (particularly Paradise Lost) were themselves early manifestations of the continuing crisis of authority that later afflicted the dominant class and professions in Boston; and so, the Unitarian Milton, like the Milton of Emerson's lectures or Thoreau's Walden, quite naturally became the vehicle for literary attempts by these authors to resolve the ideological contradictions they had inherited from the Puritan past.

 

Contenido

PREFACE vii
1
THE UNITARIAN MILTON
41
THAT SAINTED SPIRIT
81
EMERSON AND MILTON
109
THE TRANSCENDENTALIST MILTON
151
PISGAH AND KTAADN
189
FRESH WOODS AND PASTURES NEW
229
INDEX
243
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K. P. Van Anglen is Lecturer on History and Literature and Keeper of the F. O. Matthiessen Collection, Harvard University. He is the editor of the Translations volume of The Writings of Henry D. Thoreau (1986), and a contributor to the forthcoming Excursions volume in that series.

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