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This book focuses on the cultural reception of Milton and his works in nineteenth-century America. Using reception theory, the work analyzes the contributions of Milton and his writings to demonstrate how major social movements appropriated him in ways that “reinvent” him, making him what Margaret Fuller called “emphatically American.” The book centers on Milton’s influence on the movements focused on the development of American Christianity, abolition, and women’s suffrage. Each group approaches his writings with different “horizons of expectations” determined, in part, by the social problems they address. Each has unique ways of disseminating and consuming information about Milton and his writings, sometimes determined by how readers in different geographical locations read him. And, each debate makes extensive use of American periodicals of the period, revealing critical information about how Milton’s writings were disseminated and deployed. Milton’s presence in these debates helped shape American society at the time and provides proof for us of how Milton can remain relevant in the issues faced by Americans in ‘our day.’
Autor: Boocker, David
ISBN: 9783031739583
Sprache: Englisch
Seitenzahl: 156
Produktart: Gebunden
Verlag: Springer International Publishing
Veröffentlicht: 17.11.2024
Untertitel: Cultural Reception in 19th-Century America and ‘Our Day’
Schlagworte: Abolition American Periodicals Cultural Reception Milton Nineteenth-Century America Paradise Lost Reception Theory Twentieth-Century America Woman’s Rights
David Boocker is Professor of Literature at the University of Nebraska Omaha, USA. His research interests include Renaissance and Early Modern Literature and Milton and his Influence. David’s published work includes “Milton after 9/11,” in  Milton and Popular Culture , “Milton and the Woman Controversy,” in  A Search for Meaning: Critical Essays on Early Modern Literature ,” and “'Women are indebted to Milton…': Milton and Women’s Rights in the Nineteenth Century,” in  Arenas of Conflict: Milton and the Unfettered Mind  (winner of the Milton Society of American Irene Samuel Award for the best multi-author collection of essays).