Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://hdl.handle.net/1959.11/26421
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dc.contributor.authorBarnes, Diana Gen
local.source.editorEditor(s): Stephanie Downes, Andrew Lynch and Katrina O'Loughlinen
dc.date.accessioned2019-03-08T05:22:37Z-
dc.date.available2019-03-08T05:22:37Z-
dc.date.issued2019-
dc.identifier.citationWriting War in Britain and France, 1370-1854: A History of Emotions, p. 127-144en
dc.identifier.isbn9781138219168en
dc.identifier.isbn9781138314139en
dc.identifier.isbn1138219169en
dc.identifier.isbn1138314137en
dc.identifier.isbn9780429446245en
dc.identifier.isbn0429446241en
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/1959.11/26421-
dc.description.abstractWhen Margaret Cavendish, Duchess of Newcastle, employed emotional terms to justify her decision to publish, rather than stage, her Playes (1662), she positioned her contribution within a pressing political and philosophical debate. In ‘The Epistle Dedicatory’ to her husband William Cavendish, Duke of Newcastle, she identifies the risks of performance: ‘If Envy did make a faction against them, they would have had a publick Condemnation; and though I am not such a Coward, as to be afraid of the hissing Serpents, or stinged Tongues of Envy, yet it would have made me a little Melancholy to have my harmless and innocent Playes go weeping from the Stage’ (my italics). Here Cavendish distinguishes her volume from the kind of public discourse that incites the emotions that fuel faction, and breed civil war. As Stephen Zwicker (1993, p. 1) reminds us, in the years immediately following the restoration of monarchy in 1660, ‘the memory of that lamented translation from language to arms remained vivid and potent’. The whole historical period should be seen in these terms: David Armitage (2017, p. 11) stresses that ‘slaughter on such a scale scythes through families, shatters communities, shapes nations. It can scar also imaginations for centuries to come’. All literary genres carried the collective emotional scars of war but, as Cavendish and her contemporaries recognised, this was particularly true of drama. The public theatres were closed by Parliament after the outbreak of civil war in 1642, and reopened after the restoration of monarchy in 1660. By 1662 when Cavendish’s Playes were published, drama was a literary genre, and the theatre a cultural institution, deeply implicated in the recent experience of civil war. In choosing to print rather than stage her dramatic works, Cavendish does not shy away from politico-literary polemic. In post-civil-war Britain tears, print drama and the fear, envy, shame and melancholy Cavendish associates with them had a collective political significance as the terms of what Alexandra Bennett (2009) calls the ‘theatre of war’. Cavendish’s Playes is an ideal focal point for considering the relationship between war and emotion. She theorises the relationship between civil war, emotion and theatre in the prefatory materials, while Bell in Campo, parts 1 & 2, and Loves Adventure, parts 1 & 2, directly concern war, specifically women’s emotional roles within it.en
dc.languageenen
dc.publisherRoutledgeen
dc.relation.ispartofWriting War in Britain and France, 1370-1854: A History of Emotionsen
dc.relation.ispartofseriesThemes in Medieval and Early Modern Historyen
dc.relation.isversionof1en
dc.titleBellicose passions in Margaret Cavendish's Playes (1662)en
dc.typeBook Chapteren
dc.identifier.doi10.4324/9780429446245-8en
local.contributor.firstnameDiana Gen
local.subject.for2008200503 British and Irish Literatureen
local.subject.seo2008950504 Understanding Europe's Pasten
local.profile.schoolSchool of Humanities, Arts and Social Sciencesen
local.profile.emaildbarne26@une.edu.auen
local.output.categoryB1en
local.record.placeauen
local.record.institutionUniversity of New Englanden
local.publisher.placeLondon, United Kingdomen
local.identifier.totalchapters13en
local.format.startpage127en
local.format.endpage144en
local.peerreviewedYesen
local.contributor.lastnameBarnesen
dc.identifier.staffune-id:dbarne26en
local.profile.orcid0000-0003-3923-603Xen
local.profile.roleauthoren
local.identifier.unepublicationidune:1959.11/26421en
dc.identifier.academiclevelAcademicen
local.title.maintitleBellicose passions in Margaret Cavendish's Playes (1662)en
local.output.categorydescriptionB1 Chapter in a Scholarly Booken
local.search.authorBarnes, Diana Gen
local.uneassociationUnknownen
local.year.published2019en
local.fileurl.closedpublishedhttps://rune.une.edu.au/web/retrieve/f03f4cc5-0ada-4b30-b369-b27f2588b422en
local.subject.for2020470504 British and Irish literatureen
local.subject.seo2020130704 Understanding Europe’s pasten
local.profile.affiliationtypeUnknownen
local.relation.worldcathttp://www.worldcat.org/oclc/1057311605en
local.relation.worldcathttp://www.worldcat.org/oclc/1056108906en
Appears in Collections:Book Chapter
School of Humanities, Arts and Social Sciences
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