Thursday, May 30, 2019

Cultural Engineering of the Poetic Parental Instinct :: Areopagitica John Milton Poetry Essays

Cultural Engineering of the Poetic Parental Instinct It seems that biological genetic engineering is not a contained threat in the last decade it seems to have spilled significantly into cultural and literary studies. In Renaissance studies, this trend becomes evident in Richard A. Goldthwaithes Wealth and the demand for Art in Italy 1300-1600 (1993) and especially in Lisa Jardines Worldly Goods A New History of the Renaissance (1996). These new histories of worldly and wealthy Renaissance attempt to consecrate consumerism and Thatcherism as the moving spirit of Renaissance purchase order and art. Considering the mere fact that less than 5% of the population could have afforded art, this search for Thatcherite motions in Renaissance society and culture seems to correlate, in its result, to what T. S. Eliot defines as artists search for new emotions in art. Unfortunately, this trend of engineering the cultural history can be observed, albeit in a approximately different form, also in the studies of individual authors and their works, and John Milton and his Areopagitica are no exception. One of the reasons for this trend in Milton studies and this particular pamphlet can be seek in the over-saturation of Areopagitica criticism dealing, to a great extent, with various aspects of authorial object and textual authority. This particular strain seems to have been brought to the point of absurdity in capital of Minnesota M. Dowlings Polite Wisdom Heathen Rhetoric in Miltons Areopagitica (1995), a book from which one can conclude, in contrast to earlier criticism (Barker, Kendrick, Belsey), that Miltons main intention for his pamphlet was to be understood at two levelsas suggested in Dowlings title and to defend simply the freedom of philosophic speech. As D. F. McKenzie has noted, recently there has been a shift of scholarly interest in Miltons Areopagitica from questions of authorial intention and textual authority to those of textual dissemination and readers hip (Miller 26). While this distancing from the authorial intention has resulted in some illuminating works about the world of mental picture, Renaissance economy, censorship and public sphere (Miller, Sherman, Norbrook), it has also produced some curious side-effects because the critics cannot avoid, in their final analysis, touch upon the authorial intention in the light of their newly made discoveries. Thus, Stephen B. Dobranski suggests that, since Areopagitica is about books, the reading of the text should begin (but not, of course, end) by placing the pamphlet within the world of printing

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