Looking Into Providences : Designs and Trials in ‹em›Paradise Lost‹/em› /
Waddington, Raymond
Looking Into Providences : Designs and Trials in ‹em›Paradise Lost‹/em› / Raymond Waddington. - 1 online resource (328 p.) : 10 b&w illustrations, 2 b&w tables
restricted access http://purl.org/coar/access_right/c_16ec
What is the role of providence in Paradise Lost? In Looking into Providences, Raymond B. Waddington provides the first examination of this engaging subject. He explores the variety of implicit organizational structures or 'designs' that govern Paradise Lost, and looks in-depth at the 'trials,' or testing situations, which require interpretation, choice, and action from its characters.Waddington situates the poem within the context of providentialism's centrality to seventeenth-century thought and life, arguing that Milton's own conception of providence was deeply influenced by the theology of Jacob Arminius. Using Milton's Arminian conception of free will, he then looks at the providential trials experienced by angels and humans. Finally, the work explores the ways in which providentialism infiltrates various kinds of discourse, ranging from military to medical, and from political to philosophical.
Mode of access: Internet via World Wide Web.
In English.
9781442643420 9781442696068
10.3138/9781442696068 doi
DISCOUNT-B.
LITERARY CRITICISM / Medieval.
821/.4
Looking Into Providences : Designs and Trials in ‹em›Paradise Lost‹/em› / Raymond Waddington. - 1 online resource (328 p.) : 10 b&w illustrations, 2 b&w tables
restricted access http://purl.org/coar/access_right/c_16ec
What is the role of providence in Paradise Lost? In Looking into Providences, Raymond B. Waddington provides the first examination of this engaging subject. He explores the variety of implicit organizational structures or 'designs' that govern Paradise Lost, and looks in-depth at the 'trials,' or testing situations, which require interpretation, choice, and action from its characters.Waddington situates the poem within the context of providentialism's centrality to seventeenth-century thought and life, arguing that Milton's own conception of providence was deeply influenced by the theology of Jacob Arminius. Using Milton's Arminian conception of free will, he then looks at the providential trials experienced by angels and humans. Finally, the work explores the ways in which providentialism infiltrates various kinds of discourse, ranging from military to medical, and from political to philosophical.
Mode of access: Internet via World Wide Web.
In English.
9781442643420 9781442696068
10.3138/9781442696068 doi
DISCOUNT-B.
LITERARY CRITICISM / Medieval.
821/.4

