The Blazing World

The Blazing World Literary Elements

Genre

Novel; science fiction

Setting and Context

The novel is set in both the real world and a fantastical parallel world called "the Blazing World." The real-world setting alternates between England (the Duchess's home) and ESFI (the Empress's native land). The Blazing World is a realm accessed through a portal in the North Pole.

Narrator and Point of View

The novel is narrated from a third-person perspective often equated with Margaret Cavendish herself. The invested narrator is one aspect of the novel that blurs the line between fiction and reality.

Tone and Mood

The novel's tone is philosophical, satirical, and contemplative. The mood of the novel is curious and intense.

Protagonist and Antagonist

The story's protagonist is the nameless female character who becomes the Empress of "the Blazing World." There is no explicit antagonist in the novel, but in Part Two the Empress and her army come to the aid of the King of ESFI to help fight off his enemies.

Major Conflict

The central conflict in the novel revolves around the Empress's attempts to govern the Blazing World appropriately. She makes the mistake of converting the inhabitants of the Blazing World to her own religion, which causes divisions among the previously harmonious hybrid species. The other important conflict in the novel appears in Part Two, when the King of ESFI (the Empress's native land) is threatened by outside forces.

Climax

The climax of the novel occurs when the protagonist, the Empress, gathers scientists, philosophers, and intellectuals from both the real world and her realm to engage in a grand assembly to defend the King of ESFI.

Foreshadowing

The Lady's initial fascination with science, philosophy, and intellectual inquiry foreshadows her eventual transformation into the all-powerful and respected Empress.

Understatement

Cavendish intentionally understates the misfortunes of William Cavendish, Duke of Newcastle, to emphasize his humility despite his major financial losses.

Allusions

Cavendish incorporates allusions to various philosophical and scientific ideas of her time. For example, she alludes to alchemical principles, references famous thinkers like Descartes, and draws on theories of natural philosophy prevalent during the seventeenth century. In her introductory material and the epilogue, she alludes to famous conquerors and kings like Henry V, Charles I, Alexander the Great, and Julius Caesar.

Imagery

Cavendish employs imagery to evoke the fantastical and otherworldly nature of the Blazing World. She describes vibrant landscapes, strange creatures, and magnificent palaces to engage the reader's imagination and create a vivid mental picture of the setting.

Paradox

The central paradox of the novel is the appearance of fiction and reality. Cavendish makes these two ideas virtually indistinguishable, emphasizing her point in the Letter to the Reader that fiction and reason are complementary forces.

Parallelism

The most apparent parallelism in the novel is that between the Blazing World and the country of England, which at the time of the novel's publication had only just recovered from Civil War. Cavendish uses the Blazing World as a template for what she sees as effective governance and the path for a prosperous society.

Metonymy and Synecdoche

N/A

Personification

The immaterial spirits are often personified in the novel in order to emphasize their power compared to regular species. However, these spirits are disembodied and are able to travel through time and space without obstacle. They are what allow the Empress and the Duchess to commune platonically for the duration of the novel.