Showing posts with label textbook. Show all posts
Showing posts with label textbook. Show all posts

Monday, September 2, 2013

Why I Require Students to Listen to Paradise Lost

As we read and study Paradise Lost in my course on John Milton, I require students to purchase and listen to a specific audiobook version of the famous long poem. This is the edition I require, the Naxos Audiobook version narrated by Anton Lesser (2005). (This can be downloaded via Audible. Students can get this for free with a trial membership at Audible or more expensively on CD via Amazon.)

Why require an audiobook version?
Paradise Lost, while not a theatrical play, is nevertheless very theatrical. Reading a very long poem can be a chore, and I have found that whenever I require students to listen to this poem, in addition to reading it themselves, they have the best experience.

Why this audiobook version?
I have listened to many audio versions of Paradise Lost, and I also enjoy the version with Nadia May as narrator. (I find it interesting especially to hear a female voice during the key temptation scenes in Book IX). Anton Lesser is a British actor with a fine feeling for the inherent drama in Milton's poetry. He makes it very exciting! Go to this page to listen to the free sample.

Do I really have to sign up for Audible?
No. As I said, you can get this on CDs via Amazon ($54) or even as a direct purchase download from Audible without membership (using the same link to Audible, above) for about $42. I am a big fan of Audible and have been a member for some time. I recommend it! But I also know students are economizing. Getting the free audiobook requires signing up for a monthly plan at $14.95/month, but then remembering to cancel the plan after downloading the free audiobook (which you are free to do).

Why I Require the Kindle Edition of Milton


The edition of Milton's work I've selected for my students to use is The Complete Poetry and Essential Prose of John Milton (edited by William Kerrigan, John Rumrich, Stephen M. Fallon; Modern Library edition, 2009).  Follow this link to Amazon where you can buy this for about $25.

Why pay for it?
Why buy an edition of Milton when all  his writings are available online for free? Some of those online editions are very well done, like those found in The John Milton Reading Room at Dartmouth. Besides, Milton's works are readily borrowed freely from libraries.

Milton was all about liberty, and I think he would be pleased to have his works available for free. But he was also concerned with the quality of his publications. A good edition is trustworthy. It has been established from reliable sources, and in this case, the spelling has been modernized. And of course a good scholarly edition of a literary text includes an introduction, explanatory notes, and a bibliography. It also helps to have a common edition when studying with others.