Tuesday, 1 January 2019

My blog ebook: Research Thoughts on... Margaret Cavendish - Volume 1





Research Thoughts on…

Margaret Lucas Cavendish, Duchess of Newcastle-upon-Tyne – Volume 1

Liba Kaucky

Series: Research Thoughts on…

Margaret Lucas Cavendish, Duchess of Newcastle-upon-Tyne – Volume 1

Sole author: Liba Kaucky

Copyright © Liba (Libuse) Kaucky 2012-2020 (Copyright acquired automatically under UK law)

The moral rights of this author have been asserted, including:  


The Right of Attribution (eg the right of an author to be credited)

The Right to Object to Derogatory Treatment (eg affecting the author’s reputation)

The Right of Integrity (eg prejudicial distortions of the work)

The Right to Object to False Attribution

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First published 2020 by Liba (Libuse) Kaucky as a blog ebook on blogger.com at The Feminist Margaret Cavendish Circle, available at:



Liba Kaucky ResearcherID: P-2484-2016

 
Liba Kaucky ORCID ID: http://orcid.org/0000-0003-1598-0833 


Academic Website: https://libakaucky.academia.edu/

First edition.

Editor: Liba Kaucky

Cover photo: Copyright © Liba (Libuse) Kaucky (photographer) 24th September 2013

All rights reserved. No reproduction without written permission from Liba Kaucky. No part of this blog ebook may be reprinted or reproduced or utilised in any form or by any electronic, mechanical, or other means now known or hereafter invented including printing, photocopying or recording, or in any information storage or retrieval system, without permission from Liba Kaucky. You must not circulate this ebook in any way other than by referring people to read it on this site:


Notices:

Practitioners and researchers must rely on themselves in evaluating and using any information and methods described herein and do so at their own risk. To the fullest extent of the law, the publisher, author, editor does not assume any liability for any injury and/or damage to persons or property as a matter of products liability, including negligence or otherwise, or from any use or operation of any methods, products, instructions or ideas contained in the material herein.



Current titles in this series:

Research Thoughts on… Lady Mary Shepherd - Volume 1

Research Thoughts on… Spinoza - Volume 1
Research Thoughts on… Spinoza - Volume 2
Research Thoughts on… Spinoza – Volume 3

Forthcoming titles: 
Research Thoughts on… Lady Mary Shepherd - Volume 2
Research Thoughts on… Margaret Lucas Cavendish - Volume 2

Research Thoughts on... Spinoza - Volume 4

I would like to dedicate this book to my mother, Jana, without whose endless love, continual encouragement and support this book would not have been possible. I want to take this opportunity to thank her for always being there for me throughout life’s ups and downs and for always having total belief in me and giving me the confidence to follow my dreams. I love you!



I would also like to dedicate this book to Professor Susan James with whom I should have undertaken my UG dissertation on Cavendish. For no good reason this didn’t happen. It’s a pity we have never done research together or ever worked together. I think we’d make a good team.

Contents:

Editor's Note

Author's Note

Chapter 1: Paper Title: Margaret Cavendish: On Flourishing

Chapter 2:  Backdrop 1: Unpacking Key Features of Possible Worlds Needed for Analysing Cavendish

Chapter 3:  Backdrop 2: Cavendish within a Feminist and Historical Context

Chapter 4: Possible Worlds in Cavendish's Poems 

Chapter 5: Possible Worlds and a Flourishing Life: A Scholarly Debate in Cavendish's Orations
Chapter 6: Male Feminist and anti-Feminist Orations on Women in Society: How Do Men Debate What Constitutes Women's Flourishing?
Chapter 7: Women’s Feminist and anti-Feminist Orations on Women in Society: How Do Women Debate What Constitutes Women's Flourishing?
Chapter 8: Scholarly and Feminist Philosophical Debates and Dialogue in Cavendish's Orations
Concluding Remarks; Bibliography

Editor's Note:


The citations (in chapter 4 of this volume) from Cavendish's 1653 original edition of 'Poems and Fancies' have only been modified by changing the 17th century typeset of the letter s (which was written more like an f) to a contemporary s to make it easier to read. Any italics are retained from the original book. To read the original, see this open access book:  

Margaret Cavendish of Newcastle, Poems and Fancies (London, UK: J. Martin, and J. Allestrye at the Bell in Saint Pauls Church Yard, 1653), 

https://ia800802.us.archive.org/35/items/poemsfancies00newc/poemsfancies00newc.pdf


In this series, the following system will apply:

Orations with a capital O refers to Cavendish’s book:

orations with a lowercase o refers to individual orations within the above book




Author's Note:




The purpose of writing this ebook and publishing it on my blog is to encourage wider access and participation in philosophy and philosophical research, not just within but also outside of academic institutions regardless of educational background. This is one of the reasons I have included open access sources for Margaret Cavendish’s writings.

I can be contacted at:

Message me via: https://independent.academia.edu/LibaKaucky

or message me via my contact form on my academia website:

https://libakaucky.academia.edu/contact

Leave a comment on my blog The Feminist Margaret Cavendish Circle:

https://thefeministmargaretcavendishcircle.blogspot.com/



Introduction

This book is my first volume in a series of books I am writing on the philosophy of Margaret Cavendish, within my broader book series 'My Research Thoughts on...', which also currently features three volumes on Spinoza and one on Lady Mary Shepherd.

In this Volume 1 on Margaret Cavendish, I introduce three methodological strands to my interpretation and analysis of her writings, which also function as philosophical thought and argument techniques which convey her philosophy:

Possible Worlds

Philosophical dialogue/Rhetoric

Thought Experiments

I will closely analyse and examine specific sections of her works, with a particular focus on possible worlds and later incorporating my comparison between Plato’s style of philosophical dialogue, the querelle des femme dialogism and Cavendish’s Orations.

The main topics in this volume span Cavendish’s love of science and planetary worlds; human flourishing and how to live in order to lead the good life; why and how Cavendish presents debates and provides a variety of differing stances on issues.

My interpretation of Cavendish is what I shall refer to in full as an Intersectional, LGBT+, Classical Radical Feminist interpretation. In chapters 6 to 8, I flesh this aspect of my interpretation, building on and clarifying my previous description of my feminist interpretation of Cavendish a couple of years ago.

My overarching interpretation of Margaret Cavendish is that she was first and foremost a philosopher and mostly used creative writing as a vehicle to express her philosophical thoughts and arguments. Hence, I take a rigorously philosophical approach to interpreting all of Cavendish's works, irrespective of the apparent genre in which they are written. My overarching interpretation of Margaret Cavendish simultaneously acknowledges Cavendish as the first British, (lesbian), gender fluid, feminist philosopher. I put lesbian in brackets because so many centuries later it is especially tricky to make assumptions about sexuality. However I have included the possibility because I have read plausible theories that she should be included in LGBT+ history as a gender non-conforming lesbian. One, this is interesting to bear in mind when picturing feminism within the context of an historical timeline of women and herstory. Two, it is relevant to my interpretation of her because this impacts on how I suggest one needs to read Cavendish 's works carefully so that one does not accidentally overlook the early forms of feminism in her works or form assumptions about her feminist (or even non-feminist) intentions which may not be true on closer examination of her texts. I do not take it for granted that readers see Cavendish as the first British feminist philosopher because she is rarely, if ever, referred to as such and I have seen references to Mary Astell, Mary Wollstonecraft and others as being considered to be the first British feminists or feminist philosophers. However, Cavendish predates these women and the context of her works certainly contains no less explicit feminist issues than theirs, so it seems highly implausible to me that these women could be the first British feminist philosophers instead of Margaret Cavendish. Furthermore, Wollstonecraft's writings are not especially philosophical in style and many of her works are written with a different purpose in mind, such as documenting her travels or recording her observations during a war. Out of the British feminists who were not philosophers, one is hard pressed to find many who predate Margaret Cavendish. One I mention in this volume is Makin, however it depends on how one wishes to define 'first'. Bathsua Makin (1600-c.-1675) predates Cavendish in the sense of being born earlier but Cavendish released her feminist books earlier than her so she predates Makin in terms of her works.

What do I mean by the term feminist and what type of feminism do I have in mind? I shall not be using the option of referring to feminists in the history of philosophy as proto-feminists, simply because they predate contemporary feminist movements. This is because I feel this causes a sense of discontinuity between feminist thinkers and theories down the ages and can create the impression that feminism is a much more recent phenomenon that it actually is. Over the course of this series on Margaret Cavendish, I shall flesh out the details of how to draw parallels between contemporary feminism and Cavendish's feminist philosophy. Nevertheless, I agree that philosophers must be interpreted within the context of their era rather than being transposed into earlier or later times and movements. Thus, such comparisons are intended as a comparative analysis to situate Cavendish within feminism as a whole within a herstory of feminist philosophy as well as to enable present day feminism to draw inspiration and knowledge from Cavendish's unique approach and perspective to both philosophy and feminism. A few years back, I stated that I interpret Cavendish as a Radical Feminist. Since then, there has been an explosion of debate surrounding what Radical Feminism is and what this approach advocates, especially concerning trans people's rights. I feel that a huge amount of this public debate has generated a great deal of confusion, and sometimes misinformation or misleading arguments about what Radical Feminism is. Hence, I would like to take the time in this introduction to attempt to clarify my meanings and definitions when I examine Cavendish and feminism.

One, I shall use the term Classical Radical Feminism to distinguish what I shall refer to as Radical Feminism from Trans Exclusionary Radical Feminism (TERFs). I shall only be exploring the radical branch of feminism which has its roots in the 1960’s civil rights movement, with some feminists adding separatist elements since the 1980’s to help combat the patriarchal system, which attempt to achieve gender equality without a reliance on men’s and male feminists’ assistance. Elsewhere, I also research the male feminist J.S. Mill, and, interestingly enough, he encouraged feminist groups to be self-reliant and independent from male assistance, including from his own help at times where suitable, so a certain amount of separatism in the right way can benefit various branches of feminism. Within Classical Radical Feminism, I shall focus on the inclusive (including trans inclusive), intersectional theories within Radical Feminism. I have never, and shall not be, drawing on or supporting TERF so-called feminism or so-called pro-LGB activism. Although I see the benefits of the women’s movement being capable of functioning independently of men, I do not endorse any form of feminism which excludes people who do not wish to identify as or live with the gender identity relating to the biological sex they were assigned at birth. My personal, academic and active feminism is, and always has been, an intersectional inclusive form of feminism, which is explicitly trans inclusive. This shapes my feminist concepts and meaning behind terms which can be relevant to themes in Cavendish, such as women’s spaces and separatism, which, however, I do not use as exclusionary notions.

My opening chapter to this volume consists of my abstract and short paper, which provides an overview of my approach to my interpretation of Cavendish, my analysis and methodologies as well as to the topic of flourishing in her philosophy. In chapters two and three, I fill in background assumptions, arguments, philosophical terminology, concepts and historical context I shall be referring to later on in my interpretation. I then analyse Cavendish’s explicit mention of possible worlds and references to planetary systems in her poetry and scholarly discourse in her orations. I then test my possible worlds hypothesis and reading of her works by applying to Cavendish’s feminist orations which do not contain explicit references to possible worlds and extend the topic of flourishing into women’s flourishing, social status and rights. I conclude by demonstrating how my methodological strands are applied to Cavendish’s philosophy and flesh out Plato-style classical dialogue in her Orations.  
















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Concluding Remarks; Bibliography

Concluding Remarks In this volume, I first examined passages in Cavendish's writings where she explicitly mentions possible worlds i...