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Margaret Cavendish and the Female Satirist
Studies in English Literature, 1500-1900, 1997Among early modern women writers who have been "rediscovered" in the last decade or so, Margaret Cavendish has attracted heightened critical attention, especially for the apparent contradictions in her self-presentations as royalist and feminist, as solitary genius and happy wife.
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Margaret Cavendish on conceivability, possibility, and the case of colours
British Journal for the History of Philosophy, 2022Peter West
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Margaret Cavendish, Duchess of Newcastle
1989Margaret Lucas was born at St John’s, near Colchester; she was the youngest child of Sir Thomas Lucas, a wealthy landowner who died shortly after his daughter was born. She was educated at home, and eventually joined the court as a maid-of-honour to Queen Henrietta-Maria, whom she accompanied into exile in Paris in 1643.
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‘Perswade us out of our selves’: Margaret Cavendish’s regulation of rhetoric
Seventeenth Century, 2018Andrew Black
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“The minde is matter moved”: Nehemiah Grew on Margaret Cavendish
Intellectual History Review, 2017Justin Begley
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"Margaret Cavendish or The Curious Reader "
2016That the seventeenth century saw a gradual and partial rehabilitation of curiosity in the philosophical discourse has been convincingly demonstrated by historians Neil Kenny and Peter Harrison, among others. At the turn of the seventeenth century, Francis Bacon famously stressed that the pursuit of knowledge must be made morally acceptable by ...
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