John Milton's Aristocratic Entertainments

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AGGIUNGI AL CARRELLO
NOTE EDITORE
This book is a comprehensive account of Milton's two aristocratic entertainments, Arcades and Comus in the context of their original occasions and in the light of Milton's developing sense of vocation as a poet in the earlier part of his career. The book is especially original in the amount of socio-historical information it offers about the relationship between the independent and pastorly poet and his aristocratic patrons, and about the degree to which Milton was prepared to work within the constraints and decorum of the Caroline masque and country-house entertainment. A particular feature of the book is the analysis of changes in the texts of the two entertainments, from the earliest version in the Trinity College manuscript through to the first printings, considering Milton's changing manner of address to the different occasions of performance and publication. A degree of tension is discovered between the poet and the organisers of the Ludlow masque, and an explanation is given for a kind of censorship in the Bridgewater manuscript of Comus.

SOMMARIO
List of illustrations; Acknowledgements; Abbreviations; Introduction; 1. Contexts and occasions; 2. The arcadians; 3. Komos - the adversary for the occasion; 4. The young heroes - realism and idealism; 5. Spiritual instructions; 6. 1634 and 1637 - texts, epilogues, audiences; 7. The sense of vocation in the 1630s; Appendix; A note on the Golden Grove portrait; Notes; Index.

PREFAZIONE
This book is a comprehensive account of Milton's two aristocratic entertainments, Arcades and Comus. The book is especially original in the amount of socio-historical information it offers about the relationship between the independent and pastorly poet and his aristocratic patrons.

ALTRE INFORMAZIONI
  • Condizione: Nuovo
  • ISBN: 9780521123266
  • Dimensioni: 216 x 13 x 140 mm Ø 300 gr
  • Formato: Brossura
  • Pagine Arabe: 232