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IndiaCulture5 days ago

Margaret Cavendish’s ‘The Blazing World’ pioneered speculative fiction 400 years ago

The article discusses Margaret Cavendish's 'The Blazing World,' a 17th-century novel considered a precursor to speculative fiction. It outlines the plot, which involves a woman traveling to an alternate world called the Blazing World, where she becomes empress and interacts with various human-animal hybrid societies.

The Blazing World is a testament to how far the written novel has travelled in the past 400 years. A literary time capsule, it holds within it the origins of a genre we now call speculative fiction.

Written by Margaret Cavendish, a wealthy iconoclast who advocated for women’s educational opportunities, and published in 1666, The Blazing World is a strange work. Testament to this, its full title is The Description Of A New World Called The Blazing-World , written by The Thrice Noble, Illustrious, and Excellent Princess the Duchess of Newcastle .

The novel follows the journey of a woman who lives by the sea and is abducted by a travelling merchant from a strange land. His boat swiftly heads to the Arctic, where it threads between the ice and all the men on board freeze to death.

The North Pole of Earth is connected to the Pole of The Blazing World. Here, the hapless lady crosses into an alternate landscape where she is rescued by gentle bear-like creatures. These creatures deliver her as a gift to their emperor, who believes her a goddess (perhaps because she manages to learn their language so quickly) and marries her.

From here, the empress swiftly rises to a position of power. She travels through the land, interrogating representatives of all the various “peoples” who rule over their domains. These human-animal chimaeras include bear-men, worm-men, fish-men, geese-men, ape-men and lice-men.

The empress is the antithesis of a picaresque hero. Rather, she is an entitled figure with a thirst for new knowledge, unreflective about adopting an imperialistic leadership role in countries where she has only recently arrived.

Sci-fi or fantasy?

At the time Cavendish’s book was written, European literature was dominated by playwrights, including Shakespeare and Ben Jonson, and poets, among them the three Johns: Donne, Milton and Dryden. Prose fiction, having flourished in older works such as The Decameron and Don Quixote , had fallen into the doldrums.

The Blazing World is sometimes called the first “science fiction” novel, but it has less reliance on science and more on fantasy or speculation. Science is present in swathes of information about the flora, fauna and geography of this new land, but such world-building – along with a central “what if” question – marks it as possibly the first work of speculative fiction.

The novel asks us: what if another world were an appendix to our own, populated with hybrid creatures specialising in different areas of science and technology?

Interestingly, the science in the work includes the relatively new technologies of the microscope and the telescope. In 1665, Robert Hooke, curator of experiments at London’s Royal Society, had published Micrographia , which included copperplate engravings of insects, rocks and plants in detail not previously seen.

After viewing lice in the microscope, the empress in the novel curtly asks if the microscope can stop the lice from biting the “poor beggars”. She quickly loses interest when she discovers that this solution is “below the noble study of microscopical observations”.

In an empowering and metafictional move, the empress is joined in the last third of the book by Cavendish herself, who adopts the role of a scribe known as The Soul of the Duchess, delivered to the Empress by the Spirits.

A trailblazer

Margaret Cavendish was an astonishing woman for her time. She loved fashion and put great effort into breaking gender conventions and wearing unconventional clothing. Her portraits are resplendent.

She was from a wealthy family and received a basic education, but began writing books at the age of 12 . She entered the court of King Charles I at 20 as maid of honour to Queen Henrietta Maria, at a time of social unrest. During the English Civil War, her family home was ransacked, and she and her mother were paraded through the streets of Colchester and imprisoned. She later followed the heavily pregnant queen into exile in Paris on a ship under attack by Cromwell’s forces.

In France, she met the Marquess of Newcastle, William Cavendish, and married him, despite a 30-year age gap . The couple lived in Paris and Antwerp for 15 years, during which time Margaret met the key intellectuals of the age. These included philosophers Thomas Hobbes , René Descartes and Pierre Gassendi . The latter studied the atom, a topic which influenced The Blazing World.

In 1660, the couple returned to England and were rewarded with the title of Duke and Duchess of Newcastle. Cavendish wrote various works which advocated educational opportunities for women at a time when only 10% of women had a basic education, compared to 30% of men.

The mid-17th century witnessed a small rise in the publication of works by women authors, but these were mainly on childbearing, motherhood and religion . By comparison, Cavendish’s work was scandalous and cerebral.

Before The Blazing World , Cavendish wrote a radical play, The Female Academy (1662), which imagines a cloistered group of edu…

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Source document: plato.stanford.edu

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Scroll.inIndependentCenter5 days ago
Margaret Cavendish’s ‘The Blazing World’ pioneered speculative fiction 400 years ago

The article discusses Margaret Cavendish's 'The Blazing World,' a 17th-century novel considered a precursor to speculative fiction. It outlines the plot, which involves a woman traveling to an alternate world called the Blazing World, where she becomes empress and interacts with various human-animal hybrid societies.

Bias read (Center): The article provides a factual overview of the book's content, author, and historical significance without taking a political stance or showing bias toward any ideological perspective. It focuses on cultural and literary analysis rather than politically charged topics.