The blurring of genus, genre, and gender in Margaret Cavendish’s utopias
Abstract
The Blazing World was the first utopia in English written by a woman, and likely, the first science fiction text in English. Yet it was not Margaret Cavendish’s only utopic text. The separatist spaces of her plays, and the virtual communities of her epistolary collections, were earlier utopias that contributed to her construction of Blazing World. Cavendish established the characteristics of utopian literature through the transgression of categories and hybridity. I consider her blurring of genus, genre and gender in two of her utopic texts, Sociable Letters and Blazing World, and her strategic development of the blurring of these categories.
Downloads
Downloads
Issue
Section
License
The copyright holder of the published contributions is SEDERI.The hardcopy and an open-access version of the journal will be published simultaneously. The issues will be available online in the SEDERI website (http://www.sederi.org/yearbook/) and other repositories that have signed an agreement with SEDERI.
The authors who publish with this journal agree to the following terms:
a) SEDERI retains copyright of the essay.
b) If the author wishes to republish or rewrite the essay for another journal, or include the essay published in SEDERI in their personal repositories, or in any other way, they should contact the editors to obtain permission to do so. This will entail citing SEDERI as the original source and sending the editors a copy of the new version, or the link to the website, in case of online publishing.
The author(s) hereby warrant(s) that:
a) The essay submitted for publication is an original creation and does not infringe any copyright or property right of another journal, author or publisher.
b) The essay submitted for publication has not been previously published, whole or in part, and is not being considered for publication elsewhere.
c) Written permission has been obtained for any material from other sources included in the essay submitted for publication.