Puritan Legacies: Paradise Lost and the New England Tradition, 1630-1890Cornell University Press, 1987 - 294 strán (strany) Using "Paradise Lost" as a touchstone first to the English Revolution and second to the way that revolution was transferred to America, Stavely convincingly argues that the "structure of feeling" embodied in the poem persists through three centuries ofAmerican culture. His discussion of Puritan radicalism in New England and, more importantly, his detailed case studies of Marlborough and Westborough, Massachusetts, which he investigates and understands by constant reference to Milton's great poem, display his strong gifts as both literary critic and intellectual historian. Puritan Legacies is a challenging example of the "New Historicism" we have so long needed. |
Obsah
Introduction | 1 |
The Representation | 17 |
Adam and Eve | 34 |
Autorské práva | |
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Adam and Eve Adam's American Andrews antinomian Arminian autonomy Awakening Beelzebub Bigelow Book Boston brethren called Cambridge Cambridge Platform capitalism capitalist chap Chebacco Christian Christopher Hill church meeting clerical Colonial New England declared divine doctrine Ebenezer Parkman ecclesiastical emergence English Revolution enthusiasm Eve's evidence experience Forbush Halfway Covenant Harvard University Press hath heaven Henry Ward Beecher human ideology industrial insisted intellectual James Fay John Keayne labor literary live Marlborough Mass Massachusetts ment Milton mind minister moral Morse Morse's nineteenth nineteenth-century New England Paradise Lost Parkman posture Protestant ethic Protestantism Public Library Puritan Puritan culture Quakers radical rational reality reform Reverend revolutionary rhetorical Robert Breck Samuel Bowles Satan secularized Puritan seems sense sermon seventeenth century situation social society spiritual structure struggle thee things thou tion town tradition turn Unitarian Warrin Westborough Westborough church William Winthrop's York