Machacek (English, Marist College, Poughkeepsie, New York) examines how the Homeric epics figure in the composition of Paradise Lost diverging somewhat from most scholars of the later 20th
century who focused more on the influence of Virgil to the neglect of Homer. Milton's early critics emphasized the Homer connection, however, and he suggests it was because they were more
concerned with composition and literary status than with the issues of meaning that are foregrounded by today's hermeneutic approach. His topics include the war in heaven as admonitory
exemplum, conceptions of origins and their consequences, and institutional considerations in Milton's evolving literary ambitions. He mentions that the study began as a dissertation, but does
not identify date or institution. Annotation 穢2012 Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com)