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    Paradise Lost Similes

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    In John Milton’s Paradise Lost, epic simile is frequently used to create elaborate and sweeping comparisons that contribute to a character’s development. In Book IX, Milton compares Eve to a list of goddesses by writing “To Pales, or Pomona, thus adorned / Likest she seemed Pomona when she fled / Vertumnus, or to Ceres in her prime / Yet virgin of Proserpina from Jove” (393-6). This comparison constitutes as a epic simile because it spans multiple lines and goes into great detail. One thing that…

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    full detail. He expanded the tale of the Serpent trying to convince Eve to do an act forbidden by God. It was described briefly in the bible but here, though fiction, gives more of a sense on what happened. I will dissect the fifteen lines in Paradise Lost, Book IX, where the Serpent presents his argument to Eve that she should eat the fruit from the forbidden tree. This selection shows how smooth and sly the serpent is in his manipulation. Satan wants humanity to fail and for humans to be as…

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    In this passage it becomes quite clear that Eve is consumed by the myth of Narcissus (Narcissus is the origin of the term narcissism, a fixation with the reflection or image that they portray to others. Wikipedia) Her initial reflection consumes her and is the basis for her story. She describes her reaction at seeing herself to Adam within the listening frame of Satan. This is a dialogue between a married couple that Milton sets to a framed role of Eve within the union. Eve is discussing with…

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    Daniel Ledezma Professor Cooper Section 303 3 May 2018 The Formation of Figurative Language: Purity and Rhetoric in Paradise Lost John Milton's Paradise Lost is considered by many scholars to be one of the most ambitious epic poems written in the English language. The poem, being centered around the biblical story of Genesis, aims to trace the cause and effect leading to the fall of Adam and Eve. In Milton's epic, as a consequence of the fall, language is affected in the poem, creating a…

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    Paradise Lost has been interpreted in many different ways throughout the years. One of the most debated aspects of the text is whether or not Eve is a feminist character, and by extension whether or not Milton was a misogynist. The debates have risen over the years because of the way views of women have changed. The second wave of feminism in the 1970s heavily effected the way that Milton’s work was looked at and brought upon new interpretations of the poem. Sometimes the historical context in…

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    In works based on the Christian religion God is often portrayed as all-knowing and all-powerful. This is how God is portrayed throughout Paradise Lost, he is always able to stop Satan because he always has a plan. One plan by God that is seen in the text is the creation of humankind. He wants a new species, one with free will, not a creation that will follow God because they are programmed to, but because they believe it is the right thing to do. However, God seems upset at some of mankind’s…

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    Prateek Gautam Dr. Ziva S Piltch Reading in the Humanities 9 October 2016 Temptation narrative: Genesis vs Paradise Lost The episode of the Fall of the Man is viewed with different perspectives from people to people and encounters several variances in literary pieces. John Milton’s “Paradise Lost”, which can be considered as a detailed version of the Genesis, provides a more in-depth and illustrative look of the process and the purpose of the temptation. Milton has provided the audience with…

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    In F.W. Murnau 's TABU on the south Pacific island of Bora-Bora a young couples love is threatened when the tribal warrior chief declares the girl a sacred virgin. The added beauty of this film, apart from the beautiful scenery of the South Pacific islands is the story of a struggle against fate. What we had was a tale of forbidden love, reminiscent of Romeo and Juliet set against the backdrop of the South Sea Island Bora-Bora. One interesting aspect of this film is the use of the word TABU and…

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    Paradise Lost Gender Roles

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    Through all of its twists and turns, Milton’s Paradise Lost helps us discover many things about its characters from a different perspective than we are used to. Watching the world from Satan's eyes, we see the world "for what it is", helping us to better understand the Fall of Mankind. Even more interesting, however, is that gender bias makes up so much of that story. Milton's depiction of gender roles in Paradise Lost highly influenced the plot, characterization, and major themes of the poem.…

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    their place within such a broken world, leaving the time period to be labeled as the “Lost Generation.” This label is appropriate for the era between the two world wars because it encompasses the men and women who lost their life due of the war, those who returned home with physical, mental and emotional wounds, and those on the home front that lost their lives to disease. During the Great War, many lives were lost fighting the battle for peace among the contestants. The title…

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