Milton and the New Scientific Age

Poetry, Science, Fiction

Catherine Martin author

Format:Paperback

Publisher:Taylor & Francis Ltd

Published:13th Dec '21

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

This paperback is available in another edition too:

Milton and the New Scientific Age cover

Milton and the New Scientific Age represents significant advantages over all previous volumes on the subject of Milton and science, as it includes contributions from top scholars and prominent beginners in a broad number of fields. Most of these fields have long dominated work in both Milton and seventeenth-century studies, but they have previously not included the relatively new and revolutionary topic of early modern chemistry, physiology, and medicine. Previously this subject was confined to the history of science, with little if any attention to its literary development, even though it prominently appears in John Milton’s Paradise Lost, which also includes early "science fiction" speculations on aliens ignored by most readers. Both of these oversights are corrected in this essay collection, while more traditional areas of research have been updated. They include Milton’s relationship both to Bacon and the later or Royal Society Baconians, his views on astronomy, and his "vitalist" views on biology and cosmology. In treating these topics, our contributors are not mired in speculations about whether or not Milton was on the cutting edge of early science or science fiction, for, as nearly all of them show, the idea of a "cutting edge" is deeply anachronistic at a time when most scientists and scientific enthusiasts held both fully modern and backward-looking beliefs. By treating these combinations contextually, Milton’s literary contributions to the "new science" are significantly clarified along with his many contemporary sources, all of which merit study in their own right.

"A much-needed study of an insufficiently examined topic, this groundbreaking collection demonstrates the value of, and need for, interdisciplinary approaches to literature and scientific treatises of this period."

--P. E. Phillips, Middle Tennessee State University, Highly Recommended by CHOICE

"Catherine Gimelli Martin's previous scholarship has illuminated Milton's poetry by establishing connections to the thought of Francis Bacon and to the larger field of early modern science. In editing this volume, she has brilliantly advanced that project. The diversity of the assembled essays is evidence of the extraordinary richness of the topic. It is after all not so much a single topic as a set of related ones, and this volume takes up an enormous range of issues including experimental method, astronomy, cosmology, chemistry, and medicine. One effect of reading the collection all the way through—which means traveling down a succession of different, sometimes intersecting, pathways through early modern intellectual life—is a grateful, excited sense of how much ground remains to be covered."

--David Carroll Simon, University of Maryland, College Park, USA

ISBN: 9781032241289

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: 453g

258 pages