Global Milton and Visual Art ed. by Mario Murgia and Angelica Duran (review)

IF 0.1 3区 文学 0 LITERATURE COLLEGE LITERATURE Pub Date : 2024-01-19 DOI:10.1353/lit.2024.a917867
Matthew Dolloff
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Lanham, MD: Lexington Books. $96.65 hc. 432 pp. <p>Two of the significant challenges facing literary studies are how to maintain the relevance and vitality of canonical authors such as John Milton in an increasingly diverse classroom and how to generate new and innovative research on authors who have been studied for centuries. <em>Global Milton and Visual Art</em> provides at least partial answers to both by showing us how visual art can facilitate “engaging new admirers” in “expanded editorial contexts” (Murgia and Duran 2021, 233) via research from both veteran and budding scholars. It is an encyclopedic study of Milton’s poetry through “paratextual narratives” (2021, 201) ranging from book sculptures and paintings to stained glass, music videos, and even “culinary portraits” (141). Some 103 illustrations grace the pages of this fifteen-chapter, 432-page study of the “highbrow,” “lowbrow,” and “nobrow” (148) with an additional sixty-four supplemental web-based images. It is a wonder that Milton, who in his early career was such an iconoclast and who later went blind before composing <em>Paradise Lost</em>, should be the source of so much visual representation. As Duran and Murgia point out (15), the Book III invocation asking “celestial Light” to “Shine inward, and the mind through all her powers/Irradiate, there plant eyes” is a fitting introduction to their project.</p> <p>The book is divided into four parts containing multiple chapters, the first titled “Panoramas.” In Chapter 1, Murgia and Duran state <strong>[End Page 130]</strong> their thesis, “advancing the appreciation of the presence, aesthetic appropriation, and reinterpretation of the works and legends” of John Milton (2021, 4), before giving us a preview of the essays to come. In Chapter 2, Joseph Wittreich argues that in the Romantic period, global translations of Milton’s poetry and the “feverish illustration of it” coincided with a “revitalization and secularization of Milton’s mythologies” (22) that expanded William Blake’s seminal eroticizing of <em>Paradise Lost</em>. His examples include two relatively unfamiliar artists from Italy and France, Francesco Zucchi and Anne-Marie Du Bocage, one of the few women treated in the volume. These and other Romantic recastings produce “new Miltons” (57) in the modern literary economy.</p> <p>Part II, “Cameos,” features three essays that, in quite different ways, pertain to perhaps the most famous illustrator of <em>Paradise Lost</em>, Gustave Doré. The first chapter is Hiroko Sano’s study of the influence of Japan’s great artist of the <em>ukiyo-e</em> genre, Katsushika Hokusai, on Doré and other European artists. At the center is Hokusai’s well-known “Under the Wave off Kanagawa” that evidently was worthy of imitation after the fashion of <em>Japonisme</em>. Duran takes us to Spain and then Mexico, where echoes of Doré can be discovered in the “chromo” or chromolithography images in twentieth-century popular translations of <em>Paradise Lost</em> as well as Bibles and calendars reminiscent of what Duran identifies as <em>Mexicanidad</em>. Ana Elena González Treviño’s research brings us to the present day with an analysis of how Doré’s depictions of <em>Paradise Lost</em> have inspired music videos by Pink Floyd and the EDM band, Delta Heavy, which contain distinctly video game-inspired imagery.</p> <p>Part III, “Textual Close-ups,” reveals the true diversity of genres through which Milton and his poetry have been reinterpreted, and as Wendy Furman-Adams observes, “each new visual reading is a new translation” (Murgia and Duran 2021, 26). Nathalie Collé takes us on a wild journey across several unexpected portraits of Milton the man: food, ivory, postage stamps, and more. She asks us to consider why readers of Milton are so drawn to his likeness even though the history of his portraiture is “very complicated” (2021, 143). Furman-Adams focuses on Milton’s Eve in artistic renderings of <em>Paradise Lost</em> beginning with the earliest illustrated edition of 1688. Most original is her discussion of twentieth-century female artists Carlotta Pertrina and Mary Elizabeth Groom in whose works the Modernist aesthetic is evident. 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Abstract

In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:

Reviewed by:

  • Global Milton and Visual Art ed. by Mario Murgia and Angelica Duran
  • Matthew Dolloff
Murgia, Mario, and Angelica Duran, eds. 2021. Global Milton and Visual Art. Lanham, MD: Lexington Books. $96.65 hc. 432 pp.

Two of the significant challenges facing literary studies are how to maintain the relevance and vitality of canonical authors such as John Milton in an increasingly diverse classroom and how to generate new and innovative research on authors who have been studied for centuries. Global Milton and Visual Art provides at least partial answers to both by showing us how visual art can facilitate “engaging new admirers” in “expanded editorial contexts” (Murgia and Duran 2021, 233) via research from both veteran and budding scholars. It is an encyclopedic study of Milton’s poetry through “paratextual narratives” (2021, 201) ranging from book sculptures and paintings to stained glass, music videos, and even “culinary portraits” (141). Some 103 illustrations grace the pages of this fifteen-chapter, 432-page study of the “highbrow,” “lowbrow,” and “nobrow” (148) with an additional sixty-four supplemental web-based images. It is a wonder that Milton, who in his early career was such an iconoclast and who later went blind before composing Paradise Lost, should be the source of so much visual representation. As Duran and Murgia point out (15), the Book III invocation asking “celestial Light” to “Shine inward, and the mind through all her powers/Irradiate, there plant eyes” is a fitting introduction to their project.

The book is divided into four parts containing multiple chapters, the first titled “Panoramas.” In Chapter 1, Murgia and Duran state [End Page 130] their thesis, “advancing the appreciation of the presence, aesthetic appropriation, and reinterpretation of the works and legends” of John Milton (2021, 4), before giving us a preview of the essays to come. In Chapter 2, Joseph Wittreich argues that in the Romantic period, global translations of Milton’s poetry and the “feverish illustration of it” coincided with a “revitalization and secularization of Milton’s mythologies” (22) that expanded William Blake’s seminal eroticizing of Paradise Lost. His examples include two relatively unfamiliar artists from Italy and France, Francesco Zucchi and Anne-Marie Du Bocage, one of the few women treated in the volume. These and other Romantic recastings produce “new Miltons” (57) in the modern literary economy.

Part II, “Cameos,” features three essays that, in quite different ways, pertain to perhaps the most famous illustrator of Paradise Lost, Gustave Doré. The first chapter is Hiroko Sano’s study of the influence of Japan’s great artist of the ukiyo-e genre, Katsushika Hokusai, on Doré and other European artists. At the center is Hokusai’s well-known “Under the Wave off Kanagawa” that evidently was worthy of imitation after the fashion of Japonisme. Duran takes us to Spain and then Mexico, where echoes of Doré can be discovered in the “chromo” or chromolithography images in twentieth-century popular translations of Paradise Lost as well as Bibles and calendars reminiscent of what Duran identifies as Mexicanidad. Ana Elena González Treviño’s research brings us to the present day with an analysis of how Doré’s depictions of Paradise Lost have inspired music videos by Pink Floyd and the EDM band, Delta Heavy, which contain distinctly video game-inspired imagery.

Part III, “Textual Close-ups,” reveals the true diversity of genres through which Milton and his poetry have been reinterpreted, and as Wendy Furman-Adams observes, “each new visual reading is a new translation” (Murgia and Duran 2021, 26). Nathalie Collé takes us on a wild journey across several unexpected portraits of Milton the man: food, ivory, postage stamps, and more. She asks us to consider why readers of Milton are so drawn to his likeness even though the history of his portraiture is “very complicated” (2021, 143). Furman-Adams focuses on Milton’s Eve in artistic renderings of Paradise Lost beginning with the earliest illustrated edition of 1688. Most original is her discussion of twentieth-century female artists Carlotta Pertrina and Mary Elizabeth Groom in whose works the Modernist aesthetic is evident. The idea of an “ecofeminist Eve” can help us interpret Milton’s Paradise with increased...

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全球弥尔顿与视觉艺术》,Mario Murgia 和 Angelica Duran 编(评论)
以下是内容的简要摘录,以代替摘要:评论者 Mario Murgia 和 Angelica Duran 编著的《全球弥尔顿与视觉艺术》Matthew Dolloff Murgia, Mario, and Angelica Duran, eds. 2021.Global Milton and Visual Art.Lanham, MD: Lexington Books.96.65美元,合订本。432 pp.文学研究面临的两个重大挑战是:如何在日益多样化的课堂上保持约翰-弥尔顿等经典作家的相关性和活力,以及如何对研究了几个世纪的作家进行新的创新研究。全球弥尔顿与视觉艺术》至少为这两方面提供了部分答案,它向我们展示了视觉艺术如何通过资深学者和新锐学者的研究,在 "扩大的编辑语境 "中促进 "吸引新的崇拜者"(Murgia and Duran 2021, 233)。该书通过 "副文本叙事"(2021,201)对弥尔顿的诗歌进行了百科全书式的研究,从书籍雕塑和绘画到彩色玻璃、音乐视频,甚至 "烹饪肖像"(141)。在这本 15 章、432 页的 "高雅"、"低俗 "和 "高尚"(148 页)研究著作中,约有 103 幅插图,另有 64 幅网络补充图片。弥尔顿在其早期的创作生涯中是一个偶像破坏者,后来在创作《失乐园》之前失明,他竟然是如此多视觉表现的来源,这真是一个奇迹。正如 Duran 和 Murgia 所指出的那样(15),第三卷中祈求 "天光""向内照耀,心灵通过她所有的力量/放射出来,在那里种下眼睛 "是对他们项目的恰当介绍。全书分为四个部分,包含多个章节,第一章名为 "全景"。在第 1 章中,穆尔吉亚和杜兰阐述了他们的论点,即 "推进对约翰-弥尔顿作品和传说的存在、美学挪用和重新诠释的欣赏"(2021,4),然后为我们预览了接下来的文章。在第 2 章中,约瑟夫-维特里奇认为,在浪漫主义时期,弥尔顿诗歌的全球翻译和 "狂热的插图 "与 "弥尔顿神话的复兴和世俗化"(22)相吻合,后者扩展了威廉-布莱克对《失乐园》的开创性色情化。他举出的例子包括两位相对陌生的意大利和法国艺术家,弗朗切斯科-祖奇和安妮-玛丽-杜博卡奇,她们是本卷中为数不多的女性艺术家之一。这些作品和其他浪漫主义作品在现代文学经济中产生了 "新的米尔顿"(57)。第二部分是 "偶遇",收录了三篇文章,它们以迥然不同的方式与《失乐园》最著名的插图画家古斯塔夫-多雷(Gustave Doré)有关。第一章是佐野弘子关于日本伟大的浮世绘艺术家葛饰北斋对多雷和其他欧洲艺术家的影响的研究。作品的中心是北斋著名的 "神奈川外海波涛下",这幅画显然值得模仿日本画的风格。杜兰将我们带到西班牙,然后是墨西哥,在二十世纪流行的《失乐园》译本中的 "chromo "或色版画图像,以及让人联想到杜兰所认为的 "墨西哥风情 "的《圣经》和日历中,都能发现多雷的影子。安娜-埃莱娜-冈萨雷斯-特雷维诺(Ana Elena González Treviño)的研究将我们带到了今天,她分析了多雷对《失乐园》的描绘如何启发了平克-弗洛伊德(Pink Floyd)和 EDM 乐队三角洲重型(Delta Heavy)的音乐录影带,这些录影带包含了明显受电子游戏启发的图像。第三部分 "文本特写 "揭示了弥尔顿及其诗歌被重新诠释的真正多样性,正如温迪-弗曼-亚当斯(Wendy Furman-Adams)所言,"每一种新的视觉解读都是一种新的翻译"(Murgia and Duran 2021, 26)。娜塔莉-科莱(Nathalie Collé)带我们踏上了一段狂野之旅,穿越了密尔顿这个人的几幅意想不到的肖像:食物、象牙、邮票等等。她要求我们思考,尽管弥尔顿肖像画的历史 "非常复杂"(2021 年,143 页),但为什么研究弥尔顿的读者会被他的肖像所吸引。从 1688 年最早的插图版开始,Furman-Adams 重点关注弥尔顿在《失乐园》艺术渲染中的 "夏娃 "形象。最具独创性的是她对二十世纪女艺术家卡洛塔-佩尔特里娜(Carlotta Pertrina)和玛丽-伊丽莎白-格鲁姆(Mary Elizabeth Groom)的论述,在她们的作品中,现代主义美学显而易见。生态女性主义夏娃 "的概念可以帮助我们更好地解读弥尔顿的《失乐园》。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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COLLEGE LITERATURE
COLLEGE LITERATURE LITERATURE-
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