Delirious Milton: The Fate of the Poet in Modernity

Delirious Milton: The Fate of the Poet in Modernity

by Gordon Teskey
Delirious Milton: The Fate of the Poet in Modernity

Delirious Milton: The Fate of the Poet in Modernity

by Gordon Teskey

eBook

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Overview

Composed after the collapse of his political hopes, Milton's great poems Paradise Lost, Paradise Regained, and Samson Agonistes are an effort to understand what it means to be a poet on the threshold of a post-theological world. The argument of Delirious Milton, inspired in part by the architectural theorist Rem Koolhaas's Delirious New York, is that Milton's creative power is drawn from a rift at the center of his consciousness over the question of creation itself. This rift forces the poet to oscillate deliriously between two incompatible perspectives, at once affirming and denying the presence of spirit in what he creates. From one perspective the act of creation is centered in God and the purpose of art is to imitate and praise the Creator. From the other perspective the act of creation is centered in the human, in the built environment of the modern world. The oscillation itself, continually affirming and negating the presence of spirit, of a force beyond the human, is what Gordon Teskey means by delirium. He concludes that the modern artist, far from being characterized by what Benjamin (after Baudelaire) called "loss of the aura," is invested, as never before, with a shamanistic spiritual power that is mediated through art.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780674044302
Publisher: Harvard University Press
Publication date: 07/01/2009
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 224
File size: 426 KB

About the Author

Gordon Teskey is Professor of English, Harvard University, and editor of the Norton Critical Edition of Paradise Lost.

Table of Contents

Contents Introduction 1 Artificial Paradises 2 Milton’s Halo 3 Milton and Modernity 4 Why, This Is Chaos, Nor Am I Out of It 5 God’s Body: Concept and Metaphor 6 A Bleeding Rib: Milton and Classical Culture 7 Milton’s Choice of Subject 8 Revolution in Paradise Regained 9 Samson and the Heap of the Dead Notes Index

What People are Saying About This

Stephen Greenblatt

A brooding, brilliant, fantastically ambitious book in which Gordon Teskey undertakes to write a history of modernity through an analysis of creation in Milton. For Teskey, Milton was not only the greatest epic poet since Homer but also the philosophical revolutionary who marked the decisive break between divine will and human will. Before Milton, poets derived their authority from the cosmos that God had created; after Milton, they claimed the power of creation for themselves. At once risk-taking and deeply learned, Delirious Milton is a crucial text for anyone who wishes to understand the central claims of modern art.
Stephen Greenblatt, author of Will in the World

Stanley Fish

Gordon Teskey begins his meditation by observing that, in contrast to Spenser, Milton is a poet of the 'origin'; that is, he 'strives to understand things by going back to their beginnings.' What Milton finds when he goes back is the act of divine creation, the consciousness of which enters into a complex and even vertiginous relationship with the creation the poet himself is now attempting. Out of 'the rapid alternation between those two,' between 'obedience to the existence of the other and resolution to produce,' Milton, says Teskey, produces a poetry of delirium. It is the achievement of Teskey's book to match that delirium--that sense of the unconfinable and our struggles to confine it--with his own.
Stanley Fish, author of How Milton Works

Angus Fletcher

This is the most important study of Milton to be written in many years. Teskey has a rare gift for combining rigorous argument with an unusually broad sense of literary history. He thinks afresh about Milton--no mean achievement--and at the same time provides us with a new way of understanding the conditions under which Milton could be a poet of such cosmic range.
Angus Fletcher, author of A New Theory for American Poetry

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