“The professor obviously enjoys Milton and communicates that joy as well. His enthusiasm and ease of lecturing make him another of the very nice Yale lecturers (and, no, I didn't go there). He criticizes when he feels Milton deserves it but overall the approach is very evenhanded and the emphasis is on the beauty and artistry of Milton's poetry, along with discussions of the prose works, especially Milton's Areopagitica and his justification of regicide.
And, rightly, about half the course is on "Paradise Lost". My small caveat (I would give it 4 1/2 if I could) is based on what I feel are occasional leaps of interpretation -- which the professor DOES often indicate as such -- that seem an academic's need to find "something" new. Other writers are also referenced who support similar leaps.
Anyway, we're all adults here and we can each decide to agree or not, to investigate further or to read the original again more carefully. And I suppose if it gets one to address the works with more attention to those other possibilities (however much I might tend to disagree with some of those possibilities) and widen our scope of accessibility to the works, then it can only help, even if in the end our original interpretations are nonetheless reinforced. They are then stronger for having experienced the friction of alternate views. In any case, I found the course rewarding, sending me back in particular to "Paradise Lost" with a renewed enthusiasm and curiosity.
As with several other Yale courses, and courses from many other universities as well, this is such a great opportunity for those of us who were unable for various reasons to have attended such schools or to have taken such classes to get a taste -- many tastes! -- later in life of what was missed, and to do so basically for free.”
Some Book Guy via Apple Podcasts ·
United States of America ·
03/31/15