Utopia (1516) and Paradise Lost (1667): Politically subversive?
- Created by: Ashleigh Owens
- Created on: 22-05-16 16:39
Utopia and Paradise Lost-Politcally subversive? |
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Overall comparisonParadise Lost: Is politically subversive, because of its context (civil war 1642-1649/Glorious revolution 1688-1689 + Parliamentarian Milton who wrote the poem in hiding when monarchy was restored-he was eventually pardoned) and its negative discourse of power and absolute monarchy. Kingship is a socially constructed position. However, he also acknowledges both Heaven (Royalists) and Hell (Parliamentarians), he asks the reader to question authority fairly, and not to accept absolute monarchy without reason. (He equates Satan with reason and God with force, so his views are clear.) The importance of this period is the ability to question. Utopia: Is politically subversive because of its context (More's opposition to Henry's policies/divorce + his subsequent beheading 1535-dying words: "the king's good servant, but God's first") and its negative depiction of absolute monarchy: evils of private wealth, kingly ignorance and censorship of opposing views. His utopia had not absolute monarchy but it is also 'no where' (Greek). His condemnation of the monarchy is not as final as Milton's, for he sees the king as a necessary evil, in a corrupt world, for Utopia is a hope, not a truth. The real world needs a governing hand, and that hand is the king. He champions a better king, not no king at all. *ANALYSIS TECHNIQUES FOR PARADISE LOST: 4 Levels of Allegory: (1) Literal/Historical-The story’s conflict as metaphorical of historical conflicts. (2) Allegorical/Tropological-Biblical references + allusions, (MAIN LEVEL). (3) Moral/Tropological-The present moral, not linked to historical/biblical conflicts but to the internal conflict in the reader, what does it instruct the reader do? (Question authority because of free will/subjectivity). (4) Analogical/Eschatological-Treating the poem like a sacred text, it has ‘divine, prophetic, mystical and apocalyptic meanings,’ "-justify the ways of Gods to men" (Book 1 Milton). *Allegory is used to convey moral truths to the ‘deserving few’ like Jesus’ parables, he speaks in them to everyone who cannot understand these moral truths, but those few: “Blessed are your eyes, for they see: and your ears, for they hear” |
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