Milton in America

December 8, 2008

Announcing a special issue of University of Toronto Quarterly
Milton in America, edited by Paul Stevens and Patricia Simmons, offers a series of fresh new perspectives on the presence of Milton in American literature and culture. It seeks to investigate and complicate the received wisdom implicit in the old claim that ‘Milton is more emphatically American than any author who has lived in the United States.’ This important collection of seven new essays by leading international scholars from Britain, Canada, and the United States offers insight into both the ways Milton was re-shaped by his reception into American culture and, conversely, the ways the great poet’s writings often stimulated opposition to conventional American norms.

Articles:
Milton in America: Introduction
Paul Stevens

Cold War Milton
Sharon Achinstein

Milton among the Pragmatists
David Hawkes

Un-American Milton
Christopher Kendrick

Milton and the Pursuit of Happiness
Catherine Gimelli Martin

Liberty Before and After Liberalism: Milton’s Shifting Politics and the Current Crisis in Liberal Theory
Feisal G. Mohamed

Contemporary Ancestors of de Bry, Hobbes, and Milton
Mary Nyquist

Limited quantities available Order via e-mail your copy of UTQ 77.3, Milton in America, today! Also available ONLINE now!

University of Toronto Quarterly
Acclaimed as one of the finest journals focused on the humanities, University of Toronto Quarterly is filled with serious, probing, and vigorously researched articles spanning a wide range of subjects in the humanities. Often the best insights in one field of knowledge come through cross-fertilization, where authors can apply another discipline’s ideas, concepts, and paradigms to their own disciplines. UTQ is not a journal where one philosopher speaks to another, but a place where a philosopher can speak to specialists and general readers in many other fields. This interdisciplinary approach provides a depth and quality to the journal that attracts both general readers and specialists from across the humanities.

Discover Canada’s best-kept literary secret!
Since 1936, University of Toronto Quarterly has devoted an entire issue to Letters in Canada. This annual winter issue of UTQ offers probing evaluations of work by Canadian scholars and by international scholars on Canadian issues. Not restricted by language, reviews include coverage of the year’s creative work by both established and emerging writers in poetry, fiction, drama, and translation, in both English and French. In recent years, the Letters in Canada issue has encompassed over 650 pages and featured the work of more than 200 reviewers, whose informed and thoughtful reviews provide an extensive record of current research in the humanities in Canada. The coverage is complemented with notice of work published internationally on Canadian literature, history, politics, culture, and the arts.

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