Book contents
- World-Making Renaissance Women
- World-Making Renaissance Women
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Figures
- Contributors
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction The Literary Contours of Women’s World-Making
- Part I Early Modern Women Framing the Modern World
- Part II Remaking the Literary World
- Part III Connecting the Social Worlds of Religion, Politics, and Philosophy
- Part IV Rethinking Early Modern Types and Stereotypes
- Chapter 13 Learning to Imitate Women: Male Education and the Grammar of Female Experience
- Chapter 14 Mothers and Widows: World-Making against Stereotypes in Early Modern English Women’s Manuscript Writings
- Chapter 15 Queer Virgins: Nuns, Reproductive Futurism, and Early Modern English Culture
- Chapter 16 Defensor Feminae: Aemilia Lanyer and Rachel Speght
- Chapter 17 Margaret Cavendish’s Melancholy Identity: Gender and the Evolution of a Genre
- Select Bibliography
- Index
Chapter 17 - Margaret Cavendish’s Melancholy Identity: Gender and the Evolution of a Genre
from Part IV - Rethinking Early Modern Types and Stereotypes
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 25 November 2021
- World-Making Renaissance Women
- World-Making Renaissance Women
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Figures
- Contributors
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction The Literary Contours of Women’s World-Making
- Part I Early Modern Women Framing the Modern World
- Part II Remaking the Literary World
- Part III Connecting the Social Worlds of Religion, Politics, and Philosophy
- Part IV Rethinking Early Modern Types and Stereotypes
- Chapter 13 Learning to Imitate Women: Male Education and the Grammar of Female Experience
- Chapter 14 Mothers and Widows: World-Making against Stereotypes in Early Modern English Women’s Manuscript Writings
- Chapter 15 Queer Virgins: Nuns, Reproductive Futurism, and Early Modern English Culture
- Chapter 16 Defensor Feminae: Aemilia Lanyer and Rachel Speght
- Chapter 17 Margaret Cavendish’s Melancholy Identity: Gender and the Evolution of a Genre
- Select Bibliography
- Index
Summary
When writers in the first half of the seventeenth century wanted to describe what possessed them while composing their prose or poems, they would typically name a melancholy muse or temperament. The best-known illustration of this creative impulse was the female figure of Melancholia portrayed in Albrecht Dürer’s engraving Melencolia 1 (1514), described in Robert Burton’s Anatomy of Melancholy (1621) as “a sad woman leaning on her arme with fixed lookes, … halfe mad, … and yet of a deepe reach, excellent apprehension, judicious, wise and witty.” The poets and scholars who professed that they could identify with her somber, preoccupied bearing would immediately be recognized by their audiences if not as geniuses, then as pretending toward such a status. Although the familiar figure of Melancholia was female, neither Burton nor any of the other theorists on the subject imagined there could be any women writers identifying with the forms of introspective intellectualism and inventiveness that she represented.
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- World-Making Renaissance WomenRethinking Early Modern Women's Place in Literature and Culture, pp. 272 - 287Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2021