Sunday, 31 August 2025

Part 9 (season 13): The Intersex Princess

Below is the script for episode 10, the final episode of Season 13 of my Philosophy Fluency podcast. 

You can listen to this episode here

๐ŸŽง 

Hello and welcome to the last episode of Season 13 of Philosophy Fluency. Let's enjoy some coffees with rose petals on top, to celebrate and support the England Roses' dominant wins so far during the current Women's Rugby World Cup. Their sporting excellence is paving the way for women and girls in Sport and is another shining example, in addition to the Lionesses women football team, of how sporty English women really are. 

At the end of the previous episode, I put forward my suggestion that the real life Queen Christina is a plausible model for the character of the Princess. There are intriguing parallels between Queen Christina and the Princess:

As I touched upon previously, both:

1) have their biological sex questioned and 'a mistake' is declared, changing their perceived sex to the opposite, whilst a Princess. At birth, when Christina was a Princess, before she became a Queen Regnant, the women who assigned her male later said they'd made a mistake and reassigned her female, apparently to great embarrassment. The mediator uses the same word "mistake" when she says, and I quote from Act V, Scene II: 

"How, never such a Mistake; why we have taken a Man for a Woman." 

2) they both try to escape societal stricture on gender by entering a convent, albeit very different types of convents. Nevertheless, Queen Christina enjoyed more freedoms than most women in her convent.

3) both suffer from genderphobic women having an hysterical fit over the biological sex of Christina and the Princess. In this way, the mediator could be modeled on the narrow-minded and rather sexist women around the baby Princess Christina. Moreover, an even closer match to the hysterical character of the mediator is Christina's mother, Maria Eleonora, whose poor mental health, hysterical behaviour and terrible attitude problem and lack of love for her son turned daughter Christina, was such that her husband, the King of Sweden, Gustavus Adolphus, decided it was best she didn't bring her up herself, so that her madness didn't affect the young Christina. 

I suggest that a 17th century reader or audience may recognise the life story of Queen Christina in the plot of The Convent of Pleasure. Furthermore, I think it's plausible that the root cause of the bigotry could be the same between Christina and the Princess. Given that the mother is hysterical and negative about her own daughter after her biological sex reassignment as a baby, so the mediator's hysterical prejudice and attitude problem may also be due to intersexphobia. 

4) both Christina and the Princess are crowned a King: Queen Christina was literally, officially crowned a King during her coronation. The Princess wins the prize of being unofficially crowned King, while Lady Happy is crowned Queen, for being the couple who danced the best at a maypole event. However, the Princess is a Prince and ruler in a foreign country. So in that sense, the Princess can also officially function like a monarch and can rule like a King. 

So I argue that there's at least a strong possibility that the Princess/ Prince is intersex, in which case, Cavendish can leave both the so-called biological sex and the gender identity of this character an eternal mystery, always somewhat ambiguous. This would have the advantage of bringing out the inherent, naturally occuring complexities within both sex and gender. 

5) like Margaret Cavendish herself, Queen Christina and the Princess both feel comfortable wearing full male and full female attire in public and all three of them are on the receiving end of bigotry as a result, both in the 17th century and still today, such as Virginia Woolf in the 20th century who famously made derogatory remarks about Cavendish and universities still in the 21st century have an attitude problem towards Cavendish and scholarship on her, especially Philosophy departments. And that's not just sexism, because not all women philosophers in the past are affected by this prejudice, especially if they're cis, heterosexual, religious Christian women in history. 

Unlike any other scholarly interpretation, my intersex reading would illustrate Cavendish's theme and questions in the play, about the nature of gender: 

Would we really know who is male and female, simply by observing them? 

Are people neatly in the binary categories of male or female by nature or not? 

Although this is clearly a long-standing debate, this is also a very contemporary debate. It involves the topic known as the nature or nurture debate. It asks very modern day questions about whether gender is biologically-based or identity-based, or both. 

Perhaps Cavendish wants the play to end somewhat up in the air. I suggest that Cavendish wants to dispel the gender binary. And she'd be right. Gender isn't clear cut. People are not clearly this or that, which is why the sports world ceased to do sex testing decades ago and why some experts today still insist sex testing is still not always 100% reliable and informative. 

It's amazing to think that Margaret Cavendish had the brains to work this out four centuries ago yet TERFS and so-called gender critics still haven't reached that advanced, nuanced stage of thinking in the 21st century. 

I shall conclude this season on Cavendish now by highlighting that, although The Convent of Pleasure has some serious messages about gender, biological sex, social expectations, genderfluidity and feminism to analyse, this play is nonetheless meant to be light-hearted, witty, and entertaining. 

I shall be taking my usual week off after a season. I need some time for research. I'll be back on Friday 12th September with the next season, Season 14. Until then, enjoy yourselves and take care! 


References:

Cavendish, Margaret 'The Convent of Pleasure', 1668, available at: 

https://digital.library.upenn.edu/women/newcastle/convent/convent.html 



Tuesday, 19 August 2025

Part 8: Discussing Question1: Is there a Gender Reveal scene in Cavendish's Convent of Pleasure?

Below is the script for episode 9, the penultimate episode within Season 13 of my Philosophy Fluency podcast. 

For the reference bibliography of works cited in this episode, see the end of this blog post. 

๐ŸŽง

Hello and welcome to Philosophy Fluency Season 13 episode 9. We've had a heatwave this past week. I hope everyone's been enjoying their holidays and soaking up some of the beautiful sun. 

Yesterday was International Butch Appreciation Day and in this episode we will be appreciating butches in history especially the 17th century.

I've given you all extra time to think about the questions I invited you to mull over in the previous episode because I doubt you'll be in the mood to listen to philosophy when the weather is so amazing.

What have I been doing? I've been enjoying myself working at my art, experimenting with various styles inspired by art sessions that I've attended. I really enjoy interacting with other artists and seeing their work too. 

So over coffees let's return to last week's episode. I left you with several questions. There are no right or wrong answers to those thought provoking questions. So, over our summer ice coffees today, I'll explore the ideas within those questions and sketch out my approach to unearthing possible answers to them. 

My first question was:

1) is this definitely a big gender reveal scene? 

This depends on who the princess really is? A Princess or a Prince? Of course, these royal titles are very gender binary, there isn't an equivalent word for a non-binary person with this title. Neither does such a title account for anyone who is:

1) Outside the gender binary, such as a genderfluid person, as Cavendish was herself. Such a person could be comfortable with being referred to as both a Prince and a Princess. 

2) Trans women are not men. So if the Princess is a trans woman or a trans feminine woman, then the Princess isn't a man, so the mediator is not revealing anything about the Princess's sense of gender, hence no gender reveal. Either the mediator is merely revealing the sex the princess was assigned at birth; or she's simply being sensationalist and anti-LGBTQIA+, in one way or another. 

3) A butch woman. 'Butch' is a gender expression, that nevertheless spans women of various gender identities and sexualities. Some butches are simply gender expansive cis women (sometimes referred to as gender non-conforming women). It is often assumed that all butch women are lesbians, because the butch lesbian is the best known type of butch, but in reality, they may or may not be lesbian. Other butches are also not trans, but may wish to adopt a more masculine identity, such as wearing men's clothes, using male pronouns, a male name, be called their female partner's husband, and so on. For instance, Mathilde de Morny, (born 1863, died 1944) was a cross-dressing noblewoman who became known as "Missy", which was spelt backwards to create her artist name: Yssim; "Max or Uncle Max", or "Monsieur le Marquis". She was fascinatingly portrayed in the 2018 film Colette, which depicts Missy's lesbian relationship with Colette, in which Missy is seen as being like Colette's husband. 

Colette and Mathilde “Missy” de Morny
 (Photo: public domain) 

Although the term butch lesbian wasn't in existence in the 17th century, Margaret Cavendish's era, I think gender identities and sexualities transcend centuries, because they are simply lived, authentic experiences, whether you have a term to attach to that human experience during your lifetime or not. There were, for instance, women who 'passed' as men during the Early Modern period, some of whom did not just do it for personal gain (such as entering a profession barred to women) but rather felt they were living a more authentic life to present their gender as male and to marry a woman, which they somewhat legally did, under their male name.   

One example of a true life story during the 17th century, who lived during the same time period as Cavendish is a person who was assigned female at birth and was named Catalina de Erauso, who was sent to a convent but refused to lead a religious life and escaped after suffering abuse from the nuns. Catalina adopted a male identity and went by the name Antonio instead, amongst other male names. It's an absolutely amazing life story, that's been turned into stories in popular culture, such as comics, films and historical novels. Scholarship is divided on the gender identity and sexuality of Catalina who became Antonio, who was comfortable with presenting in a very masculine way, identifying as a man and was only attracted to and had relationships with women and even married a few women in South America. Was she simply a woman merely 'passing' as a man to survive? Was she a butch lesbian? Was he a trans man? Again, like with Cavendish scholarship, and Shakespeare scholarship on Ariel, there are a variety of scholarly interpretations, arguments and stances, most of which pointing to plausible supporting evidence. Although I think any attempts to deny that Erauso is of great significance to LGBT+ history is really not plausible. 

Here's a 17th century painting and a commemorative bust of Catalina / Antonio de Erauso, both proving Cavendish right that recording a variety of people in history is extremely important, so we do not skew our historical perception of lifestyle, achievements and which identities existed in the past. Hence people assigned female at birth also need access to fame, military work, being preserved in artworks and books during their lifetime, not just for their own benefit or individual glory, but for our collective historical knowledge too. 

Artist believed to be: Juan van der Hamen, c.1626

Statue in Orizaba, Mexico, 
commemorating
Catalina / Antonio de Erauso,
here referred to as 
la Monja Alfรฉrez
(Photo: Public domain: 
Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike)

I suggest there's parallels to be drawn here between Antonio and Cavendish's character of the Princess. Not only was Antonio in a convent, sometimes referred to as being trapped in a convent, but she also passed so well as a man, that she encountered her relatives as a man and none of them recognised her as their female relative, Catalina. They all believed it was a man who they didn't know. This shows that Cavendish is right to ask whether people could successfully and believably present as the opposite sex and go on being undetected.  

Moreover, when the ambassador addresses the Prince, is he right or wrong? He may be right in one way, wrong in another. For instance, right because the Prince is in male clothing but wrong in that the Prince may have been born a woman, which the ambassador may or may not know. 

After all, Queen Christina of Sweden was first assigned male at birth, then shortly afterwards his biological sex was questioned, considered a mistake, and he was re-assigned female. Nevertheless, her father didn't take that on board too seriously and brought Christina up to be just as highly educated as a boy with manly pursuits such as fencing. It wasn't just that Christina dressed as a man she pulled it off convincingly complete with manly mannerisms and a male voice. She was described as mannish by those who knew her. Here's a guide on how Queen Christina of Sweden might have dressed in the male attire of her era and class. 

She was known to have little patience with women and their feminine demeanour and their obsession with beauty and fitting in with some ideal of womanhood. Indeed, she had an aversion to heterosexual marriage and the whole world of what women said and did. 

She went on to found an academy for Philosophy and Literature and Cavendish writes a play called The Female Academy. There are distinct parallels here between Queen Christina and the Prince/Princess and Cavendish.

Queen Christina's father considered her a female heir, and she was considered a Queen when she ascended the throne. Nevertheless, she would wear male attire, and the official royal title she received on being coronated in 1633, was King. 

So, picture this: during Cavendish's lifetime in the 17th century, a royal who was considered a woman, and called a Queen, could nevertheless be seen to be in male attire and officially titled King on their ascension to the throne. 

So what made Queen Christina's sex at birth so difficult to determine? Was it as simple as a mere mistake? Was it due to misogynistic stereotypes that meant if she presented with certain gender non-conforming physical and personality characteristics, such as being hairier and a louder screamer, you assumed she must be a he? Or was it the same as these days, that people struggle to confidently assign a sex to babies who are intersex? This may explain why her father was more prepared to give Christina a first class education and training fit for the future King she would become, if perhaps he thought she was not entirely female. Nevertheless, this was rather forward thinking of him. 

Since now, in the 21st century, intersex people's bodily autonomy and human rights are disregarded, trampled on and their existence is often erased. They suffer from the extreme end of genderphobia and human rights violations. 

Queen Christina, wanted to escape heterosexual marriage so escaped to Italy in 1654 dressed as a man using a male name to live in a Catholic convent, despite being non-religious, abandoning the throne of Sweden to her cousin. She generally led an unconventional life for a woman and a royal one at that. Furthermore, Queen Christina was active in theatrical communities and was a patron of the arts. So she's highly relevant to the genre of plays. 

Christina stayed with various people along the way to Italy, visiting various countries such as Denmark, the Dutch Republic, and staying with a Jewish merchant in Antwerp. During her travels she was visited by an ambassador by the name of Pierre Chanut who knew Descartes (d. 1650) who, in turn, had corresponded with Queen Christina and visited her in Sweden. Descartes stayed with Chanut whilst also finishing 'Passions of the Soul' (1649) which he surprisingly dedicated to Princess Elizabeth of Bohemia (not Queen Christina) who also studied Philosophy and Astronomy and may have been tutored by Huygens. So, Elizabeth was the recipient of two treatises on the passions one from Edward Reynolds, the other from Descartes.

Elizabeth of Bohemia, like Queen Christina and the Prince/Princess in Cavendish's play, also entered a convent, a Lutheran one in Hereford, Germany despite being a Calvinist. 

Queen Christina relates to Cavendish's play in two ways:

Firstly, the Prince/Princess would appear to have followed just this path: both called male/female royal titles, and abandoning their position of power in a foreign country to enter a convent. And an ambassador visits him at the convent. There's a rebellion which the Prince/Princess has to squash just as Charles I had to raise an army to squash a rebellion. 

Is this rebellion one that is back in the Prince/Princess's place of origin, or has the transphobic Mediator started a civil war within the convent to push out a royal.

Secondly, it's Lady Happy who founded the Convent of Pleasure to find an alternative to marriage and heterosexuality. The purpose of the convent was not to pray, but to live an enriched female experience with broader horizons and opportunities and overcome restricted gender expectations. 

What's the main relevance to Cavendish's play, 'The Convent of Pleasure'? It's easy to assume at the moment, with all this TERF ideology trying to dominate society and school education, that nobody ever questioned biological sex or gender identity or lived unconventional lives outside the gender binary until only a few years ago, when they decided to blame everything on so-called gender ideology raising awareness and giving people a springboard from which to go on a journey of self-discovery about their personal sense of their own gender and which gender they'd like to live as in society. This contemporary stance is hugely problematic for many reasons, two of which are rather fundamental:

1) It's factually inaccurate. Yes, everybody does have a gender identity, because being cisgender is also a gender identity. Access to information has nothing to do with how people authentically feel within their own skin. If they are genuinely cisgender, then no amount of education about the existence of trans people and the diversity of experiences of gender that others have, will change that inner sense of being cisgender for you. And, if you educate yourself about various examples in history and science, then you know that biology simply isn't as clear cut about biological sex as people like to pretend, so that can never be some substitute for gender identity. 

Indeed, if you are ignorant about gender identity theory, you are more likely to mistake yourself as trans or non-binary when you are not. Learning about gender will merely make you more educated, empathetic, tolerant and knowledgeable about the people you meet and maybe even any children you may bring up, who will tell you what they feel their gender identity and expression is, whether or not you try to misinform them and keep them in a cis-heteronormative bubble. 

2) As we can see by these historical examples and literary examples, including Cavendish's play, questions about the nature of gender identity and expression are nothing new, they are age old. 

Indeed, with all this technology and emphasis on ID these days, it's significantly harder than ever before in history to make any changes to your gender expression and identity. So it would be an uneducated and ignorant stance to assume that these gender topics within Cavendish and elsewhere merely superimpose a contemporary lens onto an historical era where it doesn't belong. Many would say: Surely everything was very gendered and binary in those good old days, so researchers should stop foisting their present day LGBT+ trends onto eras where they don't belong. Well, actually, quite the contrary. History has a lot to teach us about gender and sexuality, and a lot to suprise us with! 

Contrary to social expectations, we will continue to misunderstand historical texts if we remain stuck in our 21st century bigotries and superimpose them on eras which had different priorities from ours and were not always more regressive in every way from modern day western societies. 

Hence, Cavendish did intentionally raise awareness and explore important issues about sex, gender and sexuality, and question societal expectations. She was therefore also right to ask to what extent gender expression and gender identity is 'by nature' or not. It's a more timeless question than one imagines. 

Perhaps Cavendish doesn't want to pin the Princess down to a particular gender or pin down the sexuality of both the Princess and Lady Happy. As the LGBTQ+ motto has always been and I've always believed in: Love is Love. ๐Ÿณ️‍๐ŸŒˆ๐Ÿณ️‍⚧️ So who Lady Happy or the Princess/Prince are is irrelevant. All that is relevant is that they've fallen in love.

However, if you ask me what I think the identity of the Princess/Prince in the Convent of Pleasure is I'd say the character was modelled on the societal intrigue surrounding the apparently ambiguous biological sex and gender identity of Queen Christina.

Do join me soon for the final episode of this Season 13. Enjoy the summer weather, and continue to ponder the questions I raised in the previous episode and this one. 

The script for this episode is already available on my Cavendish blog: The Feminist Margaret Cavendish Circle, so do take a look there, I've included some pictures to bring to life just how masculine these women in history were. 

Part 7: The Gender Reveal - Or Not?

Here's the script for episode 8 within Season 13 of my Philosophy Fluency podcast. 

For the reference bibliography of works cited in this episode, see the end of this blog post. 

This episode is available to listen to on demand on Spotify ๐Ÿ”— here.

๐ŸŽง 

Hello and welcome to the 8th episode of Season 13 of Philosophy Fluency. Last week, I paused Season 13 and released a special edition bonus episode, to celebrate the Lionesses winning the women's UEFA Euro 2025 championship. We were all so proud of the England team, especially since women footballers have had to build up their sport from zero, after suffering a decades long ban on women playing football in the UK, from 1921 to 1971. So their win took on such significance too, both for women and for the whole nation as well, since football is something of a major, national sport here in England. 

In this episode, I return to Cavendish's play: The Convent of Pleasure, first published in 1668, by following on from my episode 7 on the theme of the Princess's petticoat. To recap: in that episode, I discuss the petticoat scene in Act IV. Scene I, which depicts the Princess praying to Mars and apologizing for wearing a petticoat while doing so. I analysed this passage in light of pagan rituals within which it was customary to dress in the gender of the god you are worshipping, not in accordance with your own gender identity. Hence, I questioned Tiller's claim in her talk that we can read into the Petticoat scene as showing that the Princess is not entirely at ease in feminine attire, and that this monologue acts like a precursor to the Princess acting like a threatening man when she, now revealed as a he, claims he'll send an army to the convent. 

So, to build on all this, over ice coffees today, I shall give a reading of the passages in question later on in the play, in order to:

1) give you a direct understanding of how the original text reads. It's a passage that I often find sounds very different from how it's talked about in Cavendish scholarship 

2) to bring the play to life, so you can envisage it and it seems less hypothetical 

3) so we are all on the same page, quite literally, when I'm discussing my research thoughts on this passage and play, because we'll all be looking at the same original wording. I'll read the entire scene, otherwise I'm not sure it will make much sense to listeners, especially since it's not a famous play, so people are not familiar enough with it to fill in the context for themselves. 

The Convent of Pleasure by Margaret Cavendish, 1668, ACT V. SCENE I.

"Enter the Princess and the Lady Happy; The Princess is in a Man's Apparel as going to Dance; they Whisper sometime; then the Lady Happy takes a Ribbon from her arm, and gives it to the Princess, who gives her another instead of that, and kisses her hand. They go in and come presently out again with all the Company to Dance, the Musick plays; And after they have Danced a little while, in comes Madam Mediator wringing her hands, and spreading her arms; and full of Passion cries out.

O Ladies, Ladies! you're all betrayed, undone, undone; for there is a man disguised in the Convent, search and you'l find it.

They all skip from each other, as afraid of each other; only the Princess and the Lady Happy stand still together.

Prin. You may make the search, Madam Mediator, but you will quit me, I am sure.

Mediat. By my faith but I will not, for you are most to be suspected.

Prin. But you say, the Man is disguised like a Woman, and I am accoustred like a Man.

Mediat. Fidle, fadle, that is nothing to the purpose.

Enter an Embassador to the Prince; the Embassador kneels, the Prince bids him rise.

Prin. What came you here for?

Embass. May it please your Highness, The Lords of your Council sent me to inform your Highness, that your Subjects are so discontented at your Absence, that if your Highness do not return into your Kingdom soon, they'l enter this Kingdom by reason they hear you are here; and some report as if your Highness were restrained as Prisoner.

Prin. So I am, but not by the State, but by this Fair Lady, who must be your Soveraigness.

The Embassador kneels and kisses her Hand.

Prin. But since I am discover'd, go from me to the Councellors of this State, and inform them of my being here, as also the reason, and that I ask their leave I may marry this Lady; otherwise, tell them I will have her by force of Arms.

Exit Embassador.

Mediat. O the Lord! I hope you will not bring an Army, to take away all the Women; will you?

Prin. No, Madam Mediator, we will leave you behind us."

I'll leave you with a few questions to think about before the next episode:

1) is this definitely a big gender reveal scene? 

2) is the mediator simply one of those pious, hysterical, fantasist TERFS who is just trying to cause trouble, conflict and pretend there's a safety problem for the women to be afraid of, despite the fact that they've just been absolutely fine and happy, living in close quarters alongside the Princess all this time? 

3) Does this scene tell us more about the Princess or the mediator? 

4) We have a slip here that suggests this could be written by Cavendish's husband rather than herself. So do such pivotal scenes tell us about Cavendish's authorial intentions or not? 

5) Does this scene help us understand the true gender identity of the Princess or not, given that it's coloured by the mediator's phobic reaction? 

Do join me next week for a discussion and analysis of this passage. Have a good week! Enjoy the hot weather. Stay hydrated.

References/Bibliography:

Cavendish, Margaret 'The Convent of Pleasure', 1668, available at: 

https://digital.library.upenn.edu/women/newcastle/convent/convent.html 


(Part 11, Season 14): Intersex in the Ancient World

Below is the script for Season 14, episode 2 of my Philosophy Fluency podcast.  You can listen to this episode  here. ๐ŸŽง  Hello and welcome ...