The Countenance Divine & 'nothing more important than trifles': critical reflections on The Countenance Divine

In 1666, poet and revolutionary John Milton completes his epic Paradise Lost amid a/ever of prophetic speculation: is this the year God will finally deliver a terrible judgement on London? in 1777 an apprentice engraver called William Bloke has a defining spiritual experience; thirteen years later t...

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Main Author: Hughes, Michael Edward
Format: Thesis
Language:English
English
Published: 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:https://repository.londonmet.ac.uk/7401/1/591066_Vol1.pdf
https://repository.londonmet.ac.uk/7401/2/591066_Vol2.pdf
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author Hughes, Michael Edward
author_facet Hughes, Michael Edward
author_sort Hughes, Michael Edward
collection LMU
description In 1666, poet and revolutionary John Milton completes his epic Paradise Lost amid a/ever of prophetic speculation: is this the year God will finally deliver a terrible judgement on London? in 1777 an apprentice engraver called William Bloke has a defining spiritual experience; thirteen years later this vision returns, and leads him towards a daring act of creation. In J888, five women are brutally murdered and mutilated in the East End by a troubled young man in thrall to a mysterious master. And in 1999, as the walls between past, present and future collapse, and the end of time itself approaches, a computer programmer working on the Millennium Bug discovers he might hold the key to the coming apocalypse. This Creative Writing PhD comprises a complete novel (86,495 words) and a critical commentary (32,269 words), plus appendices (c. 10,000 words). The Countenance Divine is an original work of prose fiction composed of four parallel narratives, each grounded in extensive historical and literary research. The accompanying commentary takes the form of a series of critical reflections which investigate and contextualise the process of composition. In particular, they provide new perspectives on the ethics of using and abusing historical facts in imaginative writing, and on the place of the fantastical in contemporary British literary fiction. They also consider the specific formal and stylistic challenges of this project, and offer a uniquely frank and detailed account of the creation of a novel from first inspiration to final draft. The appendices include extracts from early drafts, as well as the first modern transcript of one of the novel's key historical sources: a rare pamphlet which describes the disinterment of John Milton's remains in 1790.
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spelling oai:repository.londonmet.ac.uk:74012022-04-08T11:18:45Z http://repository.londonmet.ac.uk/7401/ The Countenance Divine & 'nothing more important than trifles': critical reflections on The Countenance Divine Hughes, Michael Edward 800 Literature & rhetoric In 1666, poet and revolutionary John Milton completes his epic Paradise Lost amid a/ever of prophetic speculation: is this the year God will finally deliver a terrible judgement on London? in 1777 an apprentice engraver called William Bloke has a defining spiritual experience; thirteen years later this vision returns, and leads him towards a daring act of creation. In J888, five women are brutally murdered and mutilated in the East End by a troubled young man in thrall to a mysterious master. And in 1999, as the walls between past, present and future collapse, and the end of time itself approaches, a computer programmer working on the Millennium Bug discovers he might hold the key to the coming apocalypse. This Creative Writing PhD comprises a complete novel (86,495 words) and a critical commentary (32,269 words), plus appendices (c. 10,000 words). The Countenance Divine is an original work of prose fiction composed of four parallel narratives, each grounded in extensive historical and literary research. The accompanying commentary takes the form of a series of critical reflections which investigate and contextualise the process of composition. In particular, they provide new perspectives on the ethics of using and abusing historical facts in imaginative writing, and on the place of the fantastical in contemporary British literary fiction. They also consider the specific formal and stylistic challenges of this project, and offer a uniquely frank and detailed account of the creation of a novel from first inspiration to final draft. The appendices include extracts from early drafts, as well as the first modern transcript of one of the novel's key historical sources: a rare pamphlet which describes the disinterment of John Milton's remains in 1790. 2013 Thesis NonPeerReviewed text en https://repository.londonmet.ac.uk/7401/1/591066_Vol1.pdf text en https://repository.londonmet.ac.uk/7401/2/591066_Vol2.pdf Hughes, Michael Edward (2013) The Countenance Divine & 'nothing more important than trifles': critical reflections on The Countenance Divine. Doctoral thesis, London Metropolitan University.
spellingShingle 800 Literature & rhetoric
Hughes, Michael Edward
The Countenance Divine & 'nothing more important than trifles': critical reflections on The Countenance Divine
title The Countenance Divine & 'nothing more important than trifles': critical reflections on The Countenance Divine
title_full The Countenance Divine & 'nothing more important than trifles': critical reflections on The Countenance Divine
title_fullStr The Countenance Divine & 'nothing more important than trifles': critical reflections on The Countenance Divine
title_full_unstemmed The Countenance Divine & 'nothing more important than trifles': critical reflections on The Countenance Divine
title_short The Countenance Divine & 'nothing more important than trifles': critical reflections on The Countenance Divine
title_sort countenance divine nothing more important than trifles critical reflections on the countenance divine
topic 800 Literature & rhetoric
url https://repository.londonmet.ac.uk/7401/1/591066_Vol1.pdf
https://repository.londonmet.ac.uk/7401/2/591066_Vol2.pdf
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