Reading Milton through Islam

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Antiprelatical Tracts
Arab Muslim World
Arab World Today
Arabic literary reception
Areopagitica
Bardi Chapel
Bayt Al Maqdis
Biblia Sacra Polyglotta
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Category=QRP
comparative literature
cross-cultural translation
early modern literature
early modern studies
Egyptian Public Sphere
English Studies
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Feisal G. Mohamed
Francois-Xavier Gleyzon
Friend Enemy Distinction
global Renaissance
Holistic Typology
Intellectus Agens
interfaith studies
Islam
Islam Issa
John Milton
Levant Company
literature in Islam
Milton's Areopagitica
Milton's Argument
Milton's Jesus
Milton's Nativity Ode
Milton's Tract
Miltonic Text
Miltonic texts in Islamic scholarship
Milton’s Areopagitica
Milton’s Argument
Milton’s Jesus
Milton’s Nativity Ode
Milton’s Tract
Modern Arabic Literature
Morsi's Ousting
Morsi’s Ousting
Muslim Jesus
Nabil Matar
Nativity Ode
Paradise Lost
Paradise Regained
Post-publication Censorship
Quranic intertextuality
reception studies
religious discourse analysis
religous studies
Tarif Khalidi
translation

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367264666
  • Weight: 220g
  • Dimensions: 174 x 246mm
  • Publication Date: 22 Mar 2019
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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John Milton’s poetry and prose are central to our understanding of the aesthetic, political and religious upheavals of early modern England. Innovative recent scholarship, however, continues to expand the range of contexts through which we read Milton beyond Christian Europe, unearthing the vitality and resonance of the Miltonic text within religious and political debates across borders, through time and in multiple languages.

The Islamic world has begun to receive deserved recognition as one such global site of this cultural energy. The publication of complete translations of Paradise Lost into Arabic has stimulated fresh critical explorations from a multiplicity of perspectives: historicist, comparative and theological. Attention to spatially and religiously diverse influences and reception contexts offers new avenues of approach into masterpieces including Paradise Lost, Paradise Regained and Areopagitica, as well as into the cultural forces these texts represent, reimagine and contest. By exploring how Milton, Islam and the Middle East address and implicate one another, this collection asks how, why and where Milton matters. This book was originally published as a special issue of English Studies.

David Currell is Assistant Professor of English at the American University of Beirut, Lebanon. His research addresses issues of reception and early modern literature, with particular attention to classical and contemporary global contexts. François-Xavier Gleyzon is Assistant Professor of English at the University of Central Florida, USA. His research and publication focus on Renaissance Literature, Visual and Cultural Theory.