Repackaging Milton for the Late Seventeenth-Century Book Trade Jacob Tonson, Paradise Lost, and John Dryden's The State of Innocence
Author(s)
Publisher
Oxford: Oxford University Press
Date issued
2021
In
Making Milton: Print, Authorship, Afterlives
From page
42
To page
52
Subjects
Publication Paradise Lost (1688) Jacob Tonson book trade John Dryden The State of Innocence illustrations Richard Bentley Subscription publication
Abstract
This chapter focuses on the magisterial 1688 folio edition of Paradise Lost, published by Jacob Tonson and Richard Bentley, exploring the possible reasons why these men chose to publish Milton at this time, as well as the impact the edition had both on Milton’s authorial afterlife and on their careers as stationers. The chapter places the 1688 Paradise Lost folio in the wider context of Tonson’s career, including his involvement in pirate publication schemes and his status (from 1678) as Dryden’s publisher, to argue that the 1688 edition of Paradise Lost, one of the most profound turning points in Milton’s authorial afterlife, had less to do with the political context of 1688 and the perceived vendibility of the poem and more to do with Tonson’s own ambitions and frustrations as a stationer.
Later version
https://global.oup.com/academic/product/making-milton-9780198821892?resultsPerPage=100&facet_narrowbyprice_facet=50to100&lang=en&cc=au#
Publication type
book part
File(s)
