1st Edition

Speech Acts in Blake’s Milton

By Brian Russell Graham Copyright 2023
136 Pages
by Routledge

136 Pages
by Routledge

136 Pages
by Routledge

Using a framework based on J. L. Austin’s understanding of performative speech and Angela Esterhammer’s work on how things are done with words in Milton’s and Blake’s poetry, this study provides an extended close reading of the speech acts of characters in Blake’s epic poem Milton . With the exception of what we learn about in the part of the poem known as the Bard’s Song, Blake’s Milton is... Read more

Introduction

Chapter 1: The Bard’s Song I: From the Beginning Until The Creation of Fallen Space

Chapter 2: The Bard’s Song II: The Creation of Fallen Time and Death, and Milton’s Response to the Song

Chapter 3: ‘the forward path / Of Milton’s journey’ and the Opponents of His Progress

Chapter 4: Opposition to Milton in Golgonooza and Los’s Defence of the ‘Shadow Terrible’

Chapter 5: The Descent of Ololon

Chapter 6: The Redemption of the Contraries

Chapter 7: Coda: Milton as Speech Act

Bibliography

Index

Biography

Brian Russell Graham is a two-time graduate of the University of Glasgow, where he completed an M.A. (Hons.) and PhD in English Literature. He is currently a lecturer at the University of Copenhagen and Copenhagen Business School. His first monograph, The Necessary Unity of Opposites, published in 2011, is a study of Northrop Frye, particularly Frye’s dialectical thinking. His second monograph, On a Common Culture, was published in 2022.

"Brian Russell Graham expertly examines Milton a Poem through a close reading that engages with performative speech act theory, using it to demonstrate the importance of the characters’ spoken lines and also to explain how the lack of any direct speech can help to bring about, or forestall, the impending apocalypse... Graham presents a dense and invigorative argument that needs to be followed both carefully and slowly. Readers who are interested in either Milton or performative speech acts will find it a perfect example of how to do a very thorough analysis of Blake’s poem"

--Annise Rogers, Blake /An Ilustrated Quarterly