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Familiar Epistolary Philosophy: Margaret Cavendish's Philosophical Letters

journal contribution
posted on 2023-05-17, 01:12 authored by Barnes, D
The autobiographical terms in which Margaret Cavendish's writing is often read obscure the degree to which she engaged with her intellectual heritage. Philosophical Letters (1664) in particular has been interpreted as Cavendish's bid to establish her friendship and parity with her philosophical peers, but her argument has broader implications. She uses the genre of the familiar letter, or letter of friendship, to demonstrate that her philosophical ideas issue from sociable principles. Cavendish opens with a discussion of Hobbes' Leviathan ostensibly focused upon non-political issues. However her political views are implied through the inherently sociable form of the letter. Cavendish uses the friendship letter to portray sociability as natural, and therefore, an ideal basis for the restored royalist polity.

History

Publication title

Parergon

Volume

26

Pagination

39-64

ISSN

0313-6221

Department/School

School of Humanities

Publisher

Australian Nz Assn Med Renais Stud

Place of publication

Univ Sydney Dept Modern Greek, Sydney, Australia,

Rights statement

Copyright 2009 Australian and New Zealand Association of Medieval and Early Modern Studies (Inc.)

Repository Status

  • Restricted

Socio-economic Objectives

Expanding knowledge in history, heritage and archaeology

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