Informações principais
Sobre o conteúdo
First published more than 350 years ago, Paradise Lost retells the biblical story of Adam and Eve in English heroic verse, imitating classical models of epic poetry. Milton’s poem, along with its arguments regarding free will, tyranny, and slavery, informed modern conceptions of civil liberty, republican government, and free speech. In the United States, men like Benjamin Franklin, Thomas Jefferson, and John Adams credit Milton’s poem as having shaped their ideas of religious and civil liberty in a democratic republic.
In this DartmouthX course, learners will use the Milton Reading Room’s online resources and links to contribute to an ever-growing body of scholarship. Originally developed in 1997 by Dartmouth's Professor Thomas Luxon and his students, The John Milton Reading Room is an online scholarly edition of all of Milton’s poetry in English, Latin, and Italian, and selected prose works in English.
The annotations and glosses to Paradise Lost in the Reading Room not only help readers make their way through a notoriously difficult poem, they also provide links to the classical, biblical, religious, and historical works to which the poem so frequently refers. This makes informed engagement with Milton’s epic poem more possible than it ever has been.
- New ways to read and understand Milton’s Paradise Lost
- How to research and pose questions in the service of reading
- Annotation of the poem (some annotations may be incorporated into the Milton Reading Room)
- Experimentation with crowd-sourced scholarship about Paradise Lost
- Reading strategies that can be applied to any early modern text
Programa de estudos
- What is an epic poem? What is an epic hero?
- Milton’s Epic Verse
- How is Milton’s Satan heroic? And not?
- Milton’s God
- Marriage—The New Heroic Subject?
- The Bible Story and Milton’s Story
- Political Ideology in Paradise Lost: What are the Origins of Tyranny and Slavery?
- Genres in Paradise Lost
Instrutores
Thomas H. Luxon
Professor of English
Dartmouth College
Michael Goudzwaard
Instructional Designer
Dartmouth College
Dan Maxell Crosby
Visual Storyteller
Dartmouth College
Laura Braunstein
Digital Humanities Librarian
Dartmouth College
Wendel Cox
Humanities and Social Sciences Librarian
Dartmouth College
Criador do conteúdo

Plataforma

EdX est une plateforme d'apprentissage en ligne (dite FLOT ou MOOC). Elle héberge et met gratuitement à disposition des cours en ligne de niveau universitaire à travers le monde entier. Elle mène également des recherches sur l'apprentissage en ligne et la façon dont les utilisateurs utilisent celle-ci. Elle est à but non lucratif et la plateforme utilise un logiciel open source.
EdX a été fondée par le Massachusetts Institute of Technology et par l'université Harvard en mai 2012. En 2014, environ 50 écoles, associations et organisations internationales offrent ou projettent d'offrir des cours sur EdX. En juillet 2014, elle avait plus de 2,5 millions d'utilisateurs suivant plus de 200 cours en ligne.
Les deux universités américaines qui financent la plateforme ont investi 60 millions USD dans son développement. La plateforme France Université Numérique utilise la technologie openedX, supportée par Google.