The Blazing World
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Beschrijving
Bol
Margaret Cavendish's The Blazing World (1666) is a dazzling hybrid of romance, utopia, natural philosophy, political allegory, and proto-science fiction. Its voyage narrative carries a kidnapped lady into a fantastical realm beyond the North Pole, where she becomes Empress and debates knowledge with bear-men, bird-men, and other rational species. Written in an exuberantly self-conscious prose, the work challenges Baconian experimentalism, imagines female sovereignty, and stands beside early modern utopian writing while anticipating speculative fiction's world-making ambitions. Cavendish, Duchess of Newcastle, was one of seventeenth-century England's most audacious intellectuals: a poet, playwright, philosopher, and controversial public woman who insisted on publishing under her own name. Exiled during the English Civil War and connected to royalist and scientific circles, she developed independent views on matter, motion, imagination, and authority. The Blazing World reflects both her exclusion from learned institutions and her bold effort to create a literary space where a woman might rule, reason, and invent. This book is recommended to readers interested in feminist literary history, early science fiction, utopian thought, and the relations between imagination and knowledge. Strange, witty, and philosophically provocative, it rewards those willing to meet an original mind on her own terms.
Vergelijk aanbieders (1)
Margaret Cavendish's The Blazing World (1666) is a dazzling hybrid of romance, utopia, natural philosophy, political allegory, and proto-science fiction. Its voyage narrative carries a kidnapped lady into a fantastical realm beyond the North Pole, where she becomes Empress and debates knowledge with bear-men, bird-men, and other rational species. Written in an exuberantly self-conscious prose, the work challenges Baconian experimentalism, imagines female sovereignty, and stands beside early modern utopian writing while anticipating speculative fiction's world-making ambitions. Cavendish, Duchess of Newcastle, was one of seventeenth-century England's most audacious intellectuals: a poet, playwright, philosopher, and controversial public woman who insisted on publishing under her own name. Exiled during the English Civil War and connected to royalist and scientific circles, she developed independent views on matter, motion, imagination, and authority. The Blazing World reflects both her exclusion from learned institutions and her bold effort to create a literary space where a woman might rule, reason, and invent. This book is recommended to readers interested in feminist literary history, early science fiction, utopian thought, and the relations between imagination and knowledge. Strange, witty, and philosophically provocative, it rewards those willing to meet an original mind on her own terms.
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