On the Deathbed: Margaret Cavendish on What to Say in Times of Grief
No Thumbnail Available
Date
2015
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
LIR. journal
Abstract
The article highlights a couple of fictitious speeches of dying
persons, written by the 17th century philosopher, dramatist and
author Margaret Cavendish. The speeches are included in her
book Orations of Divers Sorts, Accomodated to Divers Places
(1662), in which early modern society is displayed in various
rhetorical situations. In the introduction Cavendish invites the
reader on a tour through a metropolitan city, while eavesdropping
on people talking. Her book is in a way a theatrical
staging, which fits well with the Renaissance metaphor of
»theatrum mundum«. Relating Cavendish’s intervention on
this stage to early modern philosophical discussions on
emotions and to the rhetorical genre as such, the article
discusses how Cavendish conceived of the concepts of grief
and comfort in her age.
Description
Keywords
Margaret Cavendish, Philippe Ariès, deathbed, consolation, rhetoric, theatrum mundum