What in Me Is Dark: The Revolutionary Afterlife of Paradise Lost

What in Me Is Dark: The Revolutionary Afterlife of Paradise Lost

by Orlando Reade
What in Me Is Dark: The Revolutionary Afterlife of Paradise Lost

What in Me Is Dark: The Revolutionary Afterlife of Paradise Lost

by Orlando Reade

Hardcover

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Overview

A highly original hybrid of literary criticism and political history, telling of the enduring, surprising and ever-evolving relevance of Milton’s epic poem through the scandalous life of its creator and the revolutionary lives that were influenced by it.

What in Me Is Dark tells the unlikely story of how Milton’s epic poem came to haunt political struggles over the past four centuries, including the many different, unexpected, often contradictory ways in which it has been read, interpreted, and appropriated through time and across the world, and to revolutionary ends. The book focuses on twelve readers—including Malcolm X, Thomas Jefferson, George Eliot, Hannah Arendt, and C.L.R James—whose lives demonstrate extraordinary and disturbing influence on the modern age.

Drawing from his own experiences teaching Paradise Lost in New Jersey prisons, English scholar Orlando Reade deftly investigates how the poem was read by people embedded in struggles against tyranny, slavery, colonialism, gender inequality, and capitalist exploitation. It is experimental nonfiction at its finest; rich literary analysis and social, cultural and political history are woven together to make a clarifying case for the undeniable impact of the poem.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781662602795
Publisher: Astra Publishing House
Publication date: 11/12/2024
Pages: 288
Product dimensions: 5.50(w) x 8.25(h) x (d)

About the Author

Orlando Reade studied at Cambridge and Princeton, where he received his PhD in English literature in 2020. For a period of five years, he taught in New Jersey prisons. He is now an assistant professor of English at Northeastern University London. His writing has appeared in publications including The Guardian, Frieze, and The White Review, where he also served as a contributing editor.
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