Darkness Visible Mark Oram
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- Education
John Milton’s Paradise Lost is an English epic poem about the Fall of Adam and Eve. Darkness Visible offers my 10th grade English students a detailed reading and analysis of key excerpts from throughout the poem. Since the show has recouped its costs, donations are no longer accepted. Thanks for listening!
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Paradise Lost - An Interview with Dr. Kate McPherson
Wrapping up Paradise Lost is tough to do on your own. So I got a little help from a friend. Dr. Kate McPherson is a Professor of English at Utah Valley University, and Director of the Honors Program. And she just so happens to be an expert on 17th-Century English Literature. Today, I get to do something I've wanted to do for years - I get to ask her all my big Paradise Lost questions. I hope you enjoy this conclusion to the first season of Darkness Visible.
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Redemption
In the final episode of Paradise Lost, Adam and Eve confront the full weight of their disobedience. Despair gives way to reconciliation in this bittersweet denouement of Milton's epic.
[Trigger warning: suicidal ideation. If you are experiencing suicidal thoughts, please call the National Suicide Hotline at 800-273-8255, visit suicidepreventionlifeline.org, or reach out to a trusted adult. Help is available.] -
Punishment
“God is jealous, and the LORD revengeth; the LORD revengeth, and is furious; the LORD will take vengeance on his adversaries, and he reserveth wrath for his enemies.” In this episode, the aftermath of the Fall continues to unravel. Students are encouraged to analyze how themes of vengeance, guilt, and self-deception have developed as the story has reached its climax.
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Lost
Would you be willing to die for the one you love? In this episode, students will begin to see the negative consequences of “Man’s first disobedience.”
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Forbidden Fruit
Why is the Tree of the Knowledge of Good and Evil even in this garden in the first place? In this crucial episode, students will be asked to carefully evaluate the deceptive rhetoric of the story’s antagonist as he tempts Eve. Can you see through the holes in his argument, or does he get you too?
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Eden Exposed
Would you be happy, living with the knowledge that an enemy hell-bent on your destruction was watching your every move? In this episode, major themes and conflicts in the epic begin to converge in an increasingly heated argument between Adam and Eve. Students are asked to carefully evaluate the merits and weaknesses of contrasting arguments regarding the nature of free will, obedience, and temptation.