Epic and empire: versions of actium -- Repetition and ideology in the Aeneid -- The epic curse and Camões' adamastor -- Epics of the defeated: the other tradition of Lucan, Ercilla, and d'Aubigné -- Political allegory in the Gerusalemme liberata -- Tasso, Milton, and the boat of romance -- Paradise lost and the fall of the English commonwealth -- David's census: Milton's politics and Paradise regained -- Ossian, medieval "epic", and Eisenstein's Alexander Nevsky.
CITATION STYLE
Quint (book author), D., & Ivic (review author), C. (2009). Epic and Empire: Politics and Generic Form from Virgil to Milton. Renaissance and Reformation, 30(4), 72–74. https://doi.org/10.33137/rr.v30i4.11526
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