Tales from the Levant : the Judeo-Arabic demonic 'other' and John Milton's 'Paradise Lost'

This thesis revisits Milton’s employment of mythology and the demonic, by shedding a light on a neglected, yet intriguing possible presence of Middle-Eastern mythology – or as identified in this thesis – Judeo-Arabic mythology in Paradise Lost. The mythographic reception of Milton’s work has been ri...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Al-Akhras, Sharihan Sameer Ata
Published: Durham University 2017
Online Access:https://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.743151
id ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-743151
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-7431512019-01-08T03:35:44ZTales from the Levant : the Judeo-Arabic demonic 'other' and John Milton's 'Paradise Lost'Al-Akhras, Sharihan Sameer Ata2017This thesis revisits Milton’s employment of mythology and the demonic, by shedding a light on a neglected, yet intriguing possible presence of Middle-Eastern mythology – or as identified in this thesis – Judeo-Arabic mythology in Paradise Lost. The mythographic reception of Milton’s work has been rightly discussed within a Greco-Roman frame. However, this thesis offers for a consideration an analysis of the unique role of Judeo-Arabic mythology. By doing so, the thesis not only aims to enrich the dualistic analyses of ‘East-West’, ‘Christian-Muslim’ and ‘Anglo-Ottoman’ relations, when tackling this angle of Early Modern studies, but also to generally demonstrate the way seventeenth-century literature encompassed multifaceted and interchangeable allusions to both Islam and Judaism in Catholic and Protestant writing. The thesis directs its attention towards examining the possible presence of two Judeo-Arabic demonic figures in Paradise Lost: the Islamic devil, Iblis, and his consort in the Jewish tradition, Lilith. The argument demonstrates the way Milton’s deployment of the Judeo-Arabic demonic not only mirrors the Biblical story of the Fall, but also connects with the political and religious upheavals of his age, including the emergence of the first English translation of the Qur’an in 1649. Furthermore, by examining the two Judeo-Arabic demonic figures in Paradise Lost not only the treatment of the demonic in Milton’s work is revisited in a way that allows for a wider scope of literary analysis, but the complex treatment of gender, identity and ‘the Other’ are similarly understood within a more pluralistic context. The thesis then concludes with the first discussion of the contemporary reception of Milton’s Paradise Lost in the writings of Arab women specifically, exploring the way the very same demonic, discussed throughout the thesis, is deployed by these female Arab authors while resisting and redefining the role of gender in religion, society and politics.Durham Universityhttps://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.743151http://etheses.dur.ac.uk/12614/Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
description This thesis revisits Milton’s employment of mythology and the demonic, by shedding a light on a neglected, yet intriguing possible presence of Middle-Eastern mythology – or as identified in this thesis – Judeo-Arabic mythology in Paradise Lost. The mythographic reception of Milton’s work has been rightly discussed within a Greco-Roman frame. However, this thesis offers for a consideration an analysis of the unique role of Judeo-Arabic mythology. By doing so, the thesis not only aims to enrich the dualistic analyses of ‘East-West’, ‘Christian-Muslim’ and ‘Anglo-Ottoman’ relations, when tackling this angle of Early Modern studies, but also to generally demonstrate the way seventeenth-century literature encompassed multifaceted and interchangeable allusions to both Islam and Judaism in Catholic and Protestant writing. The thesis directs its attention towards examining the possible presence of two Judeo-Arabic demonic figures in Paradise Lost: the Islamic devil, Iblis, and his consort in the Jewish tradition, Lilith. The argument demonstrates the way Milton’s deployment of the Judeo-Arabic demonic not only mirrors the Biblical story of the Fall, but also connects with the political and religious upheavals of his age, including the emergence of the first English translation of the Qur’an in 1649. Furthermore, by examining the two Judeo-Arabic demonic figures in Paradise Lost not only the treatment of the demonic in Milton’s work is revisited in a way that allows for a wider scope of literary analysis, but the complex treatment of gender, identity and ‘the Other’ are similarly understood within a more pluralistic context. The thesis then concludes with the first discussion of the contemporary reception of Milton’s Paradise Lost in the writings of Arab women specifically, exploring the way the very same demonic, discussed throughout the thesis, is deployed by these female Arab authors while resisting and redefining the role of gender in religion, society and politics.
author Al-Akhras, Sharihan Sameer Ata
spellingShingle Al-Akhras, Sharihan Sameer Ata
Tales from the Levant : the Judeo-Arabic demonic 'other' and John Milton's 'Paradise Lost'
author_facet Al-Akhras, Sharihan Sameer Ata
author_sort Al-Akhras, Sharihan Sameer Ata
title Tales from the Levant : the Judeo-Arabic demonic 'other' and John Milton's 'Paradise Lost'
title_short Tales from the Levant : the Judeo-Arabic demonic 'other' and John Milton's 'Paradise Lost'
title_full Tales from the Levant : the Judeo-Arabic demonic 'other' and John Milton's 'Paradise Lost'
title_fullStr Tales from the Levant : the Judeo-Arabic demonic 'other' and John Milton's 'Paradise Lost'
title_full_unstemmed Tales from the Levant : the Judeo-Arabic demonic 'other' and John Milton's 'Paradise Lost'
title_sort tales from the levant : the judeo-arabic demonic 'other' and john milton's 'paradise lost'
publisher Durham University
publishDate 2017
url https://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.743151
work_keys_str_mv AT alakhrassharihansameerata talesfromthelevantthejudeoarabicdemonicotherandjohnmiltonsparadiselost
_version_ 1718808487866138624