In his classic study, The Dialectics of Creation, Michael Lieb foregrounds the myriad ways in which Milton uses scatology throughout Paradise Lost to describe the depravity of the devil. But Satan is not the only character in the epic to be associated with excretion. Milton\u27s angels and Milton\u27s God are also implicated in the operations of the lower bodily stratum. In these instances, however, allusions to the evacuative functions attest to an exalted divinity rather than a disgusting diabolism. Evacuation in Paradise Lost is thus a highly complex signifier. Not simply a pejorative pointing inevitably at a damnable degradation, scatology can also signal a sublime goodness. This essay draws upon humoral theory and socio-cultural ...
By 1641 John Milton had prepared a rather detailed outline for a tragic drama, Adam Unparadised. The...
My thesis is a study of the poetic origin of Milton's Satan and his significance apart from his dra...
Milton‟s Chaos is described at one point as „the Womb of Nature and perhaps her grave‟. Though this ...
Milton'sParadise Lost is an epic opem about the origin of evil, mixing classical and Christian forms...
Literary scholars have recently shown renewed interest in John Milton’s unconventional religious and...
In an often quoted but imperfectly understood passage in John Milton’s Paradise Regain’d, Satan prof...
For centuries, the issue of Milton's Satan as a hero has been widely debated by literary critics, wi...
This project argues for the existence of a “New Purgatory” in the later poetic works of John Milton,...
This essay reads the narrator's representation of the Son of God in heaven and Adam and Eve in Eden ...
Paradise Lost has become a controversial epic in misrepresenting characters especially among pious c...
This is an etymological, Biblical and philosophical scrutiny of Milton's Satan. While Satan is a met...
This paper discusses the portrayal of God and Satan in John Milton’s Paradise Lost through an examin...
abstract: Often when considering John Milton's greatest work, Paradise Lost, the general public oper...
In the Paradise Lost, John Milton tried to explain how evil is seductive. It is one of the reasons ...
Special Committee Members: Winthrop Wetherbee III, Walter Cohen, William J. Kennedy, Kenneth GrossTh...
By 1641 John Milton had prepared a rather detailed outline for a tragic drama, Adam Unparadised. The...
My thesis is a study of the poetic origin of Milton's Satan and his significance apart from his dra...
Milton‟s Chaos is described at one point as „the Womb of Nature and perhaps her grave‟. Though this ...
Milton'sParadise Lost is an epic opem about the origin of evil, mixing classical and Christian forms...
Literary scholars have recently shown renewed interest in John Milton’s unconventional religious and...
In an often quoted but imperfectly understood passage in John Milton’s Paradise Regain’d, Satan prof...
For centuries, the issue of Milton's Satan as a hero has been widely debated by literary critics, wi...
This project argues for the existence of a “New Purgatory” in the later poetic works of John Milton,...
This essay reads the narrator's representation of the Son of God in heaven and Adam and Eve in Eden ...
Paradise Lost has become a controversial epic in misrepresenting characters especially among pious c...
This is an etymological, Biblical and philosophical scrutiny of Milton's Satan. While Satan is a met...
This paper discusses the portrayal of God and Satan in John Milton’s Paradise Lost through an examin...
abstract: Often when considering John Milton's greatest work, Paradise Lost, the general public oper...
In the Paradise Lost, John Milton tried to explain how evil is seductive. It is one of the reasons ...
Special Committee Members: Winthrop Wetherbee III, Walter Cohen, William J. Kennedy, Kenneth GrossTh...
By 1641 John Milton had prepared a rather detailed outline for a tragic drama, Adam Unparadised. The...
My thesis is a study of the poetic origin of Milton's Satan and his significance apart from his dra...
Milton‟s Chaos is described at one point as „the Womb of Nature and perhaps her grave‟. Though this ...