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Between Habbakuk and Locke: Pain, Debt, and Economic Subjectivation in Paradise Lost

Authors
Im, Seo Hee
Issue Date
Mar-2017
Publisher
Duke University Press
Keywords
John Milton; early modern; epic; debt; empire
Citation
Modern Language Quarterly, v.78, no.1, pp 1 - 25
Pages
25
Indexed
AHCI
SCOPUS
Journal Title
Modern Language Quarterly
Volume
78
Number
1
Start Page
1
End Page
25
URI
https://scholarworks.bwise.kr/hanyang/handle/2021.sw.hanyang/152680
DOI
10.1215/00267929-3699760
ISSN
0026-7929
Abstract
Readers of Paradise Lost have argued that the epic registers England's nascent imperialism negatively through its associations of trade with Satan. This essay rethinks Paradise Lost's relation to empire by tracing its involvement in the making of an early modern subjectivity that is constitutively informed by an awareness of debt, debit, and credit. That profane mode of thought later finds more enthusiastic expression in the early English novels of Daniel Defoe and others, but it begins to take shape in Milton, who derives it from none other than religious sources such as scripture, atonement theology, and nostalgia for purgatory. Despite its voiced misgivings about British commercialism, Paradise Lost thus participates in England's historical growth from peripheral island to sprawling world empire.
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COLLEGE OF HUMANITIES (DEPARTMENT OF ENGLISH LANGUAGE & LITERATURE)
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