Ignoring the satire of learned women, a topos of classical drama at the end of the 17th century, Magaret Cavendish published several treatises of natural philosophy between 1653 and 1668. This article aims at reversing the topos to show how a woman could use the linguistic strategies of satire. Focusing on two complementary treatises of 1666, The Blazing World and Observations upon Experimental Philosophy I try to show that the scientific theories of the duchess of Newcastle are built against renascent mechanism but also against more traditional doctrines. Cavendish’s satire first targets the hybris of conceited contemporary philosophers who intend to become « as masters and possessors of nature ». Cavendish’s criticism of philosophy as a w...
Margaret Cavendish was a philosopher and writer active in mid-seventeenth century England. She is im...
International audienceAs the XVIIth century “scientific revolution” went on, satirists hostile to th...
Accounts of the rhetorical tradition in early modern England often focus on the Royal Society of Lon...
Entre 1653 et 1668, Margaret Cavendish multiplie les publications de traités de philosophie naturell...
This collection of essays by leading scholars offers the first substantial study of Margaret Cavendi...
Abstract This dissertation examines the socio-political underpinnings of the satires about science t...
This thesis uses the entirety of Margaret Cavendish's archive to present the first full account of h...
This thesis challenges the traditional view that satire largely targeted science in the Enlightenmen...
Margaret Cavendish, Duchess of Newcastle, was a remarkable personality in both 17th c. literary and ...
Cavendish's organic materialism defends that humankind's prowess of nature is unattainable due to na...
Science fiction was used by Margaret Cavendish to highlight the negative—both present and potential—...
A striking omission in the scholarship on the reception of the chymical philosophy of Jan Baptista v...
The line that I take for my title, spoken by Bayes in the Duke of Buckingham\u27s The Rehearsal (16...
Cavendish is critical of two of the experimental sciences of her day: chemistry and microscopy. Rat...
International audienceThat the seventeenth century saw a gradual and partial rehabilitation of curio...
Margaret Cavendish was a philosopher and writer active in mid-seventeenth century England. She is im...
International audienceAs the XVIIth century “scientific revolution” went on, satirists hostile to th...
Accounts of the rhetorical tradition in early modern England often focus on the Royal Society of Lon...
Entre 1653 et 1668, Margaret Cavendish multiplie les publications de traités de philosophie naturell...
This collection of essays by leading scholars offers the first substantial study of Margaret Cavendi...
Abstract This dissertation examines the socio-political underpinnings of the satires about science t...
This thesis uses the entirety of Margaret Cavendish's archive to present the first full account of h...
This thesis challenges the traditional view that satire largely targeted science in the Enlightenmen...
Margaret Cavendish, Duchess of Newcastle, was a remarkable personality in both 17th c. literary and ...
Cavendish's organic materialism defends that humankind's prowess of nature is unattainable due to na...
Science fiction was used by Margaret Cavendish to highlight the negative—both present and potential—...
A striking omission in the scholarship on the reception of the chymical philosophy of Jan Baptista v...
The line that I take for my title, spoken by Bayes in the Duke of Buckingham\u27s The Rehearsal (16...
Cavendish is critical of two of the experimental sciences of her day: chemistry and microscopy. Rat...
International audienceThat the seventeenth century saw a gradual and partial rehabilitation of curio...
Margaret Cavendish was a philosopher and writer active in mid-seventeenth century England. She is im...
International audienceAs the XVIIth century “scientific revolution” went on, satirists hostile to th...
Accounts of the rhetorical tradition in early modern England often focus on the Royal Society of Lon...