Title: God and nature in the thought of Margaret Cavendish
Abstract: Contents: Introduction: the duchess and the divine Claims to orthodoxy: how far can we trust Margaret Cavendish's autobiography?, Hilda L. Smith The god of nature and the nature of God, Sara Mendelson Darkness, death, and precarious life in Cavendish's Sociable Letters and Orations, Joanne H. Wright God and the question of sense perception in the works of Margaret Cavendish, Brandie R. Siegfried Paganism, Christianity, and the faculty of fancy in the writing of Margaret Cavendish, James Fitzmaurice Fideism, negative theology, and Christianity in the thought of Margaret Cavendish, Lisa T. Sarasohn Brilliant heterodoxy: the plurality of worlds in Margaret Cavendish's Blazing World (1666) and Cyrano de Bergerac's Estats et Empires de la lune (1657), Line Cottegnies 'A double perception in all creatures': Margaret Cavendish's Philosophical Letters and 17th-century natural philosophy, Stephen Clucas Natural magic in The Convent of Pleasure, John Shanahan Margaret Cavendish's Cabbala: the empress and the spirits in The Blazing World, C. Perrin Radley Margaret Cavendish and the Jews, Sara Mendelson 'Soulified': Cavendish, Rubens, and the Cabbalistic Tree of Life, Brandie R. Siegfried Appendix Bibliography Index.
Publication Year: 2015
Publication Date: 2015-04-21
Language: en
Type: article
Indexed In: ['crossref']
Access and Citation
Cited By Count: 25
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