EEBO in
Education / Assignments / Professor Huston Diehl
RESEARCH ASSIGNMENT 8:73 Milton
Paradise Lost Prof. Huston Diehl
Due: November 9 Fall 2001
(Note change in due date)
DIRECTIONS:
This series of exercises is designed to familiarize you with
some of the research skills you will need to write your final
paper and to give you practice finding and using both primary
and secondary texts. It also gives you the opportunity to explore
some aspect of Milton's culture that interests you and encourages
you to draw some preliminary conclusions about how the subject
of your research might illuminate Paradise Lost. In doing these
exercises, you will be also be laying the groundwork for your
final, research paper. In order to complete these exercises, you
will need to know how to use the MLA Bibliography (MLAB) and InfoHawk;
you may also need to consult the EEBO (Early English Books On-Line)
and find your way to Special Collections, the microfilm room,
the map room, etc. Don't be afraid to ask the Reference librarians
for help--that's why they're there!
Step 1. Choose one aspect of seventeenth-century English culture
that Milton addresses or explores in Paradise Lost and that interests
you. You may, for example, want to focus on some aspect of Chrisitian
theology, English politics or political theory, or early modern
science. Or you might want to investigate Protestant theories
of marriage, Baroque aesthetics, early modern subjectivity, 17th-century
epistemology, Renaissance humanism, or English responses to the
New World. Or you might want to explore 17th-century narratives
of loss, theories of nature, conceptions of space, interpretations
of classical myths, or assumptions about sin. You might want to
investigate a seventeenth-century genre (e.g., epic, tragedy,
pastoral, or prophetic poetry).
Step 2. Find one primary text that addresses the subject you
have chosen and that you believe may illuminate Paradise Lost.
For the purposes of this assignment, a primary text is any text
written or created between 1580 and 1680. You may choose a literary,
historical, philosophical, theological, political, scientific,
visual, or musical text (among many others); you may use popular
as well as elite texts. I have listed some suggestions below.
After you have located and read or studied your primary text,
do the following four exercises:
1. First, identify whatever strikes you (an American undergraduate
in the year 2001) as puzzling, strange, illogical, perhaps even
incomprehensible. What are you not getting? What aspects of your
chosen text seem most alien to your contemporary way of seeing
the world?
2 Then, identify three or four distinguishing characteristics
of the text you have chosen. You may, for instance, take note
of a particularly powerful, unusual, or memorable metaphor or
other figure of speech; a startling or intriguing description;
a line of argument that seems particularly striking to you; a
rhetorical strategy that is particularly effective or unusual;
a cultural belief that engages or puzzles you
3. Next, identify some of the ways your text might illuminate
Paradise Lost. These may focus on content (common themes, controversies,
ideas, beliefs); on rhetoric (strategies of persuasion, ways of
engaging the reader, rhetorical devices like the catalogue or
allusion); on aesthetics or poetics; on structure; on cultural
attitudes.
4. Finally, generate a series of questions about the relation
between the primary text you have chosen and Paradise Lost. These
questions should be exploratory. They should open up interesting
areas of exploration for you. Ideally, they will be provocative,
engaging, exciting, intriguing–questions that might lead
you to real discoveries.
Step 3. Find one substantial critical or scholarly article on
your topic, read it, and then write a brief summary of its argument
and evaluate it. In your summary, focus on the central argument
and the assumptions underlying it. In your evaluation consider
whether the argument is persuasive and examine the evidence used
to support it. Do you agree with the author? Is the evidence persuasive?
Are there logical inconsistencies or holes in the argument? How
might you build on or refute the argument?
Note: please choose a recent article (written within the last
ten years or so) and one that is published in a major journal
in the field (see attached list).
Step 4. Compile a working bibliography. In addition to giving
the full citation of your primary text and critical essay, include
between five and ten additional works that you have consulted
or plan to consult. Please follow the style on the attached sheet
for your bibliography.
Some suggested primary texts:
--a work of 17th-century literature that explores the fallen
condition, man’s relation to God, death, sin, free will,
loss, or knowledge
–a political pamphlet that deals with the beheading of Charles
I, the English civil war, the Restoration, authority, hierarchy,
or rebellion
–a work that records the discovery or exploration of the
New World
–one of Milton's own prose tracts (e.g., On Christian Doctrine
or The Divorce Tracts) -- a sermon or religious tract that deals
with a theological issue pertinent to Paradise Lost
–a Protestant marriage manual
–a 17th-century medical, theological, political, or philosophical
text on the nature of women
–a 17th-century work of visual art that depicts Eden, the
fall, Satan, the War in Heaven, an allegory of sin or death, a
blind prophet, etc.
–a17th-century opera based on a classical myth
–a17th-century biography of Milton
–a17th-century map of the world or of the cosmos
–a 17th-century scientific work on astronomy, the universe,
or the telescope