Article ID: CBB001320374

Vad betyder en armbȧge? Om innebörden i Margaret Cavendishs frontespiser (2012)

unapi

Rosengren, Cecilia (Author)


Lychnos
Pages: 7-32


Publication Date: 2012
Edition Details: Translated title: [What's in an elbow? The signification of the frontispieces in Margaret Cavendish's books].
Language: Swedish

Margaret Cavendish was one of the most prolific female writers of the 17th century. She published thirteen books during her productive life, encompassing natural philosophy, poetry, drama, orations, essays, historical narrations and letters. As an intellectual woman in a time when this was much considered an oxymoron, she needed to justify her intervention in the learned world. One way of doing this was through numerous peritexts, in line with the concept of Gérard Genette. Hence all her books are introduced with explanatory forewords, dedications and authorial remarks. Furthermore she added frontispieces to her publications. Three frontispieces were made by the artist Abraham van Diepenbeek during her and her husband's exile in Antwerpen in the 1650s. These show Cavendish in three different settings, which some scholars want to interpret as her desire to appear either as a lonely genius, or as a happy wife. In the article I want to debate this interpretation, by focusing on the third frontispiece in which Cavendish is portrayed with an arm akimbo and which is the most frequently used in her books. Placing the picture in the context of an early modern pictorial tradition of emblems as well as in the context of the Renaissance concept of man, I try to show that Cavendish was well aware of the controversial in publishing her work, but also how she with a good portion of humour insisted on her right to do so.

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Citation URI
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Authors & Contributors
Thell, Anne M.
Brandie R. Siegfried
Christoffer Basse Eriksen
Xinyi Wen
Lo, Melissa
Sarasohn, L. T.
Journals
Notes and Records: The Royal Society Journal of the History of Science
Journal of the History of Ideas
Historical Studies in the Natural Sciences
Configurations: A Journal of Literature, Science, and Technology
British Journal for the History of Science
British Journal for the History of Philosophy
Publishers
WBOOKS
Saint Josephs University Press
MIT Press
Broadview Press
Bodleian Library
Ashgate Publishing
Concepts
Women in science
Visual representation; visual communication
Scientific illustration
Natural philosophy
Science and culture
Science and literature
People
Cavendish, Margaret, Duchess of Newcastle
Descartes, René
Waller, Richard
Spinoza, Baruch
Power, Henry
Merian, Maria Sibylla
Time Periods
17th century
18th century
Early modern
19th century
Modern
Enlightenment
Places
England
Netherlands
Great Britain
South America
Germany
Europe
Institutions
Royal Society of London
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