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
- Chapter 9 Royalism and Resistance: The Personal and the Political in Anne, Lady Halkett’s Meditations, 1660–1699
- Chapter 10 Hester Pulter’s Dissolving Worlds
- Chapter 11 The Feminist Worlds of Margaret Cavendish
- Chapter 12 “Augustus Reigns, but Poets Still Are Low”: Aphra Behn’s World in The Emperor of the Moon (1687)
- Part IV Rethinking Early Modern Types and Stereotypes
- Select Bibliography
- Index
Chapter 9 - Royalism and Resistance: The Personal and the Political in Anne, Lady Halkett’s Meditations, 1660–1699
from Part III - Connecting the Social Worlds of Religion, Politics, and Philosophy
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
- Chapter 9 Royalism and Resistance: The Personal and the Political in Anne, Lady Halkett’s Meditations, 1660–1699
- Chapter 10 Hester Pulter’s Dissolving Worlds
- Chapter 11 The Feminist Worlds of Margaret Cavendish
- Chapter 12 “Augustus Reigns, but Poets Still Are Low”: Aphra Behn’s World in The Emperor of the Moon (1687)
- Part IV Rethinking Early Modern Types and Stereotypes
- Select Bibliography
- Index
Summary
Across fifty-four years, Anne, Lady Halkett produced at least twenty-two volumes of manuscripts that she referred to as her “Books.” According to Halkett, the contents of those volumes are “select” and “occasional” meditations; that is, the former are exegetical works on biblical texts or liturgical practices, and the latter on anything from the weather or domestic affairs to the execution of Charles I, the Restoration of the Monarchy, and the “Glorious Revolution.” Halkett’s writing, therefore, covers topics that today would be identified as arising from both the “personal” and “political” spheres. Indeed, this division was recognized in contemporary terms by her eighteenth-century biographer, Simon Couper, when he claimed that “there was nothing of moment either in publick affairs, or in more privat occurrences which came to her notice; which, she did not make the subject of a serious meditation and reflection.”
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- Information
- World-Making Renaissance WomenRethinking Early Modern Women's Place in Literature and Culture, pp. 153 - 167Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2021