Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Making Milton’s Bogey

View through CrossRef
Abstract In The Madwoman in the Attic: The Woman Writer and the Nineteenth-Century Literary Imagination (1979), Gilbert and Gubar posit Milton and Paradise Lost as a ‘bogey’ for women writers. Wittreich’s Feminist Milton (1987) suggests an alternative reception history in which Milton’s poetry provided the basis for a more inclusive literary canon. This chapter re-examines the question of the relationship between Milton’s poetry, primarily Paradise Lost, and women’s literary history through a case study of the poetry of Anne Finch, Countess of Winchilsea (1661–1720). Though Finch acknowledges Milton’s influence explicitly in her blank-verse pastoral ‘Fanscomb Barn’, implicit debts are present throughout Finch’s 1713 Miscellany Poems and the fair-copy manuscript compilation ‘Miscellany Poems with Two Plays by Ardelia’ (1691–1701). The very different status of Milton and his verse in these two contexts illustrates the conflicted legacy of Paradise Lost for women’s literary history.
Oxford University PressOxford
Title: Making Milton’s Bogey
Description:
Abstract In The Madwoman in the Attic: The Woman Writer and the Nineteenth-Century Literary Imagination (1979), Gilbert and Gubar posit Milton and Paradise Lost as a ‘bogey’ for women writers.
Wittreich’s Feminist Milton (1987) suggests an alternative reception history in which Milton’s poetry provided the basis for a more inclusive literary canon.
This chapter re-examines the question of the relationship between Milton’s poetry, primarily Paradise Lost, and women’s literary history through a case study of the poetry of Anne Finch, Countess of Winchilsea (1661–1720).
Though Finch acknowledges Milton’s influence explicitly in her blank-verse pastoral ‘Fanscomb Barn’, implicit debts are present throughout Finch’s 1713 Miscellany Poems and the fair-copy manuscript compilation ‘Miscellany Poems with Two Plays by Ardelia’ (1691–1701).
The very different status of Milton and his verse in these two contexts illustrates the conflicted legacy of Paradise Lost for women’s literary history.

Related Results

The Fourth International Milton Symposium
The Fourth International Milton Symposium
Matthew Allen. “‘Entertaining the Irksome Hours’: Paradise Lost 2.521–76 as the Fallen Counterpart of Milton's Curriculum in Of Education.”Peter Auksi. “‘Considerate Building’: The...
Milton and the Classics
Milton and the Classics
This chapter discusses John Milton's acquaintance with classical literature, which began early and continued throughout his lifetime. Between 1615 and 1620, Milton entered St. Paul...
Milton: Literature and Life
Milton: Literature and Life
In 1660, upon the Restoration of Charles to the English throne, John Milton went into hiding. His treatises Eikonoklastes and Defensio were condemned and burned. Milton faced the p...
Milton’s Christian Temper
Milton’s Christian Temper
This chapter discusses Milton's Christian temper. It is believed Milton did not belong to any worshipping Christian community. No existing records ecist to attest that he attended ...
Milton’s Bogey Reconsidered
Milton’s Bogey Reconsidered
Abstract In Strictures on the Modern System of Female Education, Hannah More vindicates Milton’s paternal character.1 Defending Milton, she implicitly defends her ow...
MILTON IN THE CLASSROOM: SOME EXPERIENCES AND PERSPECTIVES: Teaching Milton to Undergraduates
MILTON IN THE CLASSROOM: SOME EXPERIENCES AND PERSPECTIVES: Teaching Milton to Undergraduates
As a teacher of Milton to both undergraduate and graduate students, I was surprised by Professor Gallagher's recent article1 in response to the MLA seminar on teaching Milton‐surpr...
Milton in the Twentieth Century
Milton in the Twentieth Century
This chapter examines Milton not as an absolute, but as a concept historically constructed and changing over time. It examines the ways in which the different Miltons are repaired ...
FIRST COMMERCIAL BUILDINGS ON MILTON KEYNES ENERGY PARK
FIRST COMMERCIAL BUILDINGS ON MILTON KEYNES ENERGY PARK
In September 1987, the Milton Keynes Energy Park, the first of its kind in the world, announced the start on site of the first two business development schemes. As with the residen...

Back to Top