Areopagitica

A Speech Of Mr. John Milton For The Liberty Of Unlicensed Printing

Hardcover, 189 pages

English language

Published Aug. 27, 2006 by Lawbook Exchange.

ISBN:
978-1-58477-545-4
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OCLC Number:
56526827

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Areopagitica: A speech for the Liberty of Unlicensed Printing to the Parliament of England is John Milton's famous tract against censorship. Published in 1644, Areopagitica is named after a speech by Isocrates, a fifth century BC Athenian orator. The work is counted as one of the most influential and inspired defenses of the right to freedom of expression in history. It is also a personal issue for Milton who was submitted to censorship himself when he tried to publish his defenses of divorce, radical works for the time that gained no quarter with censors. Distributed as a pamphlet, Milton's powerful arguments against 1643's Licensing Order note that classical Greek and Roman society was never subjected to such censorship, and he uses many classical and biblical references to reinforce his argument.

38 editions

Subjects

  • Law
  • Politics / Current Events
  • Political Freedom & Security - Civil Rights
  • General
  • Early works to 1800
  • Freedom of the press