In the epic poem Paradise Lost by John Milton, many principles of feminist criticism can be applied to the text. The character of eve is depicted as unequal to her counterpart, Adam, and is placed into a powerless position that she can only break free from by breaking the one rule of Eden-eating from the forbidden fruit or “fruit of knowledge”. It is interesting to see how Milton plays around with gender structures within the text because he sets it up as a typical patriarchal structure but then seemingly breaks it down using a variety of methods. I would also argue that Milton identifies with Eve more than any other character in the text, the only exception being Satan.
In Paradise Lost, in every domain where patriarchy reigns (which is pretty much everywhere), woman is other, and is objectified, marginalized, and defined at times only by difference from male norms. This is true of Eve, as she is unable to sit in on Adam’s conversations with Michael because she is seen as inferior or not as smart as him. When reading this text, it is also apparent that gender issues play a part in every aspect of Adam and Eve’s human experience. Adam and Eve’s relationship is conflicting, because Adam views Eve as his beautiful counterpart, but to the point at times that he may look at her as an object rather than her own person. Eve is aware that she is viewed as an other and takes all of her oppression into account when she decides to eat the forbidden fruit.
The hierarchy between Eve and Adam and Adam and God is first established in Book IV when we see Eve awake after being created. When Eve explains to Adam her first memories of waking up, she tells him “My other half: with that thy gentle hand/Seiz’d mine, I yielded, and from that time see/How beauty is excelled by manly grace” (Milton, 4.487-489). Eve yields to Adam as her authority figure firstly because she was created out of him and that he was created by God, but then also submits to his power since she does not have direct access to God and he does. This hierarchy is essential to Eve’s decision to eat the forbidden fruit because much of her reasoning has to do with her feeling inferior and being at the bottom of her hierarchy. She must obtain her information about anything from Adam, who obtains his information from the angel Raphael, who in turn obtains his information from God. Eve’s access to information is limited, and she is very much trapped in her lowly position. The forbidden fruit poses as her one way to gain more power and rise out of this state. Rather than the person that doomed mankind to sin, Milton instead paints Eve as a hero in a way through her decision to eat the forbidden fruit and one can view the action as her breaking out of her gender hierarchy that she is a part of.
The imagery of darkness and shade in Eve’s story works as a connection to Milton’s blindness. This is one of the ways that Milton identifies himself with Eve as opposed to other characters such as Adam. We also find out in Book XII that Eve gains the same information that Adam received from Michael, but through God in her dreams. This is a clear parallel to Milton who notes in Book XII “in darkness, and with dangers compast round,/and solitude; yet not alone, while thou/visit’st my slumbers Nightly, or when Morn/purples the East: still govern thou my Song” (Milton, 7.26-29). In this way Milton is purposefully attributing his own qualities to Eve, thus making her one the most important figures in driving Milton’s argument.
Sources cited:
Milton, John. Paradise Lost. Complete Poems and Major Prose, edited by Merritt Y. Hughes, Hackett Publishing Company, Inc., 2003, pp. 173–469.
