The age of Milton and the scientific revolution

Author(s)

    • Duran, Angelica

Bibliographic Information

The age of Milton and the scientific revolution

Angelica Duran

(Medieval and Renaissance literary studies)

Duquesne University Press, 2007

Available at  / 2 libraries

Search this Book/Journal

Note

Includes bibliographical references (p. 303-340) and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Angelica Duran reveals the way in which Milton's works interacted with the revolutionary work of his contemporaries in science to participate in the dynamic "advancement of learning" of the time period. Bringing together primary materials by early modern scientists, including Robert Boyle, William Gilbert, William Harvey, Isaac Newton, John Ray, and John Wilkins as well as educational reformers such as Samuel Hartlib and Henry Oldenburg, "The Age of Milton and the Scientific Revolution" positions Milton's literature as a coequal partner with the new cosmological theories, mathematical developments, telescopes, and scientific tracts that so thoroughly affected every aspect of recorded life in seventeenth century England. Duran shows, for example, how new developments in ornithology worked to shape the Ladys power in the young Miltons celebratory 'A Mask', how mathematics informed the sexual relationship of Adam and Eve in his mature epic Paradise Lost, and how developments in optics transformed the blinded hero of the blind authors moving tragedy Samson Agonistes. While this study is indebted to the work of historians of science -- from C. P. Snow and Thomas Kuhn to Stephen Shapin and Stephen Jay Gould -- it is not a history of science per se, but rather a cultural study that appreciates poetry as a unique lens through which early modern Englands large-scale developments in education and science are clarified and reflected. What emerges is an intimate sense of how the enormous changes of the English Scientific Revolution affected individual lives and found their ways into Miltons enduring poetry and prose.

Table of Contents

  • Introduction: Knowledge Regained
  • Milton Among Early Modern Scientists
  • The Death of the Natural Philosopher and Pastoral Teacher
  • Milton's Angelic Vanguard, Uriel and Gabriel
  • Pre- and Postlapsarian Teachers, Raphael and Michael
  • The Standard Academic Subjects and their Function
  • Subjects of Change in 'L'Allegro', 'Il Penseroso', and 'A Mask'
  • Subjects for Change in 'Of Education'
  • The Sexual Mathematics of 'Paradise Lost'
  • Brave, New Students
  • From Philomela to luscinia magarhynchos in 'A Mask'
  • The Son's Last Stages of Education
  • Samson and Natural Religion
  • Index.

by "Nielsen BookData"

Related Books: 1-1 of 1

Details

Page Top