Book contents
- Margaret Cavendish
- Margaret Cavendish
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Illustrations
- Notes on Contributors
- In Memoriam
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- Part I History of Science
- Part II Philosophy
- Part III Literature
- Chapter Eight Of Webs and Wonder
- Chapter Nine The Blazing World
- Chapter Ten Margaret Cavendish’s Prudence; or, Preservation and Transformation in Playes (1662) and Plays, Never Before Printed (1668)
- Chapter Eleven Lady Newcastle’s “Unsoiled Petticoats” and the Literary Reputation of Margaret Cavendish, 1652–1985
- Part IV Politics
- Part V New Directions
- Afterword
- Chronology of Works by Margaret Cavendish
- Select Bibliography
- Index
Chapter Eight - Of Webs and Wonder
The Atomic Vitalism of Margaret Cavendish’s Poems and Fancies
from Part III - Literature
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 April 2022
- Margaret Cavendish
- Margaret Cavendish
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Illustrations
- Notes on Contributors
- In Memoriam
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- Part I History of Science
- Part II Philosophy
- Part III Literature
- Chapter Eight Of Webs and Wonder
- Chapter Nine The Blazing World
- Chapter Ten Margaret Cavendish’s Prudence; or, Preservation and Transformation in Playes (1662) and Plays, Never Before Printed (1668)
- Chapter Eleven Lady Newcastle’s “Unsoiled Petticoats” and the Literary Reputation of Margaret Cavendish, 1652–1985
- Part IV Politics
- Part V New Directions
- Afterword
- Chronology of Works by Margaret Cavendish
- Select Bibliography
- Index
Summary
Brandie R. Siegfried “considers three characteristics of [Cavendish's] volume of verse,” Poems and Fancies, arguing first that the book is "thoroughly engaged with philosophers and mathematicians, both ancient and modern: understanding the import of her poems often requires setting them in dialogue with those thinkers.” Second, Siegfried investigates the prefaces of Cavendish's poetry, further contending that they demonstrate a feminist sensibility as they explain her views for an audience that pointedly included women. Finally, Cavendish’s eclectic ideas are not simply the musings of a careless author, but rather are the works of a committed philosopher who uses the form of poetry to clarify her theories, making them more accessible to readers while “enhancing aesthetic pleasure through increased complexity and wit.” Giving special attention to Cavendish’s poetic revisions in Poems and Fancies, Siegfried further emphasizes the importance of Cavendish’s poetry for understanding the natural philosophy espoused in Philosophical and Physical Opinions, Philosophical Letters, and Observations upon Experimental Philosophy.
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- Information
- Margaret CavendishAn Interdisciplinary Perspective, pp. 129 - 143Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2022