Abstract

Recent critical conversation has described John Milton's major works as sites of uncertainty, irreconcilability, or even confusion - as texts that actually reflect radical incoherence and openness. These newer critical voices posit, moreover, that traditional must strain to find coherence and authorial control in Milton's poetry. Richard DuRocher and Margaret Thickstun, together with an esteemed group of Milton scholars from a wide range of critical and theoretical backgrounds, respond to this challenge. While accepting the presence of uncertainty and welcoming the multiple perspectives that Milton builds into his works, this volume offers a variety of nuanced approaches to Milton's texts. As these eleven essays demonstrate, Milton's own acts of interpretation compel readers to reflect not only on the rival hermeneutics they find within his works but also on their own hermeneutic principles and choices - an interpretative complexity that is integral to his poetry's enduring appeal. Thus, each of the contributors takes up the problem of this interpretative dilemma in some way: several explore Milton's own engagement with the texts of Scripture and the classics; some examine the ways in which Milton represents the process of interpretation in his narrative poems; and still others are intrigued by the challenges that Milton's works present for the reader's own interpretative skills. The book, in responding directly to the incertitude critics of Milton, will be of interest to those on all sides of this debate and will certainly redirect the ongoing conversation.

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