Saturday, August 3, 2019
Eveââ¬â¢s Food Preparation: Art and Experience in Eden :: Research Papers
Eveââ¬â¢s Food Preparation:  Art and Experience in Eden     The arts of the first couple before the Fall have been  extensively written on. It seems that most critics view prelapsarian art  as congruous and natural to Eden, as evidence of prelapsarian splendor.  Ann Torday Gulden states that art in Eden is socially neutral: ââ¬Å"Surely  art is innocuous [in Eden], an integral part of paradisal blissâ⬠ (18).  Indeed, Eveââ¬â¢s artistic activity makes Eden seem all the more delightful  to the reader. However, with a careful examination of how Eveââ¬â¢s art  is perceived by the poemââ¬â¢s male characters, it becomes evident that  Eveââ¬â¢s aesthetics do not quite fit. It is tempting for the reader, who  lives in a ââ¬Å"fallenâ⬠ world, so unequivocally in favor of artistic culture,  to praise Eden for examples of cultural activity within it. However,  just about every example of Eveââ¬â¢s artistic activity is characterized by an  aloofness from divine discourse. The male authoritative characters of  Paradise Lost primarily ignore Eveââ¬â¢s examples of talented artistry, giving  neither praise nor disapproval. But while the lack of recognition speaks  volumes about her low status, it allows her an expansive autonomy from  the divinely recognized modes of Edenic worship and devotion which  serve to revere God. If the authoritative male characters regard her  creativity as inconsequential, then there is almost no limit to the degree  of autonomous creativity she can have within that localized sphere of  artistry; no one is watching her or correcting her. The way in which  Eve prepares food for the dinner guest, the angel Raphael, is a prime  illustration of both Eveââ¬â¢s removal from the divine discourse and her  expansion of a cultural, creative realm in which she can act, rather than  follow.    The first thing to recognize about the scene of Raphaelââ¬â¢s arrival  to instruct Adam and Eve is that Eve is excluded from proximity to the  divine by Adam. To some degree, Adam actually forces her removal.  The first one to see Raphael coming is Adam, of course. He says:    Haste hither, Eve, and, worth thy sight, behold  Eastward among the trees what glorious shape  Comes this way moving; seems another morn  Risen on mid-noon. Some great behest from Heaven  To us perhaps he brings, and will vouchsafe  This day to be our guest. But go with speed,  And what thy stores contain bring forth, and pour  Abundance fit to honour and receive  Our heavenly stranger...  (5.308)     Adamââ¬â¢s language is unquestioning. It is clear that he knows a guest  from Heaven is on his way. The speed with which he recognizes that  the thing on the horizon is from Heaven shows that he has an intuitive    					    
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