Elizabethan ‘Spinning’ and Penelope’s Weaving: The Political, the Common Law and Stately Bodies |
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Authors: | Janice Richardson |
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Affiliation: | (1) Faculty of Law, University of Leicester, Fielding Johnson Building, University Road, Leicester, LE1 7RH, UK |
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Abstract: | This paper examines the public, private and political in the work of Adriana Cavarero by drawing upon the situations of two women whose lives feature in her work: Elizabeth I and Penelope. It includes an analysis of the way in which Cavarero is rethinking Hannah Arendt’s view of ‘the political.’ Cavarero’s exposition of the metaphor of the King’s two bodies in the common law is explored, along with her critique of hylomorphism. Finally, it extends her work in Stately Bodies by considering different images of the power of the body in later political discourses regarding the worker’s body and the effect of the advance of techno-science. This paper was presented at ‘The State He’s In – Political Philosophy and the Figural: A Conference with Adriana Cavarero on her book Stately Bodies: Literature, Philosophy and the Question of Gender’ at Warwick University, Department of Philosophy in May 2004. I would like to thank Adriana and all the conference participants for their comments. Thanks also to the referees of this paper. I have kept the informal style of presentation from the conference, along with the emphasis upon theoretical, rather than historical, analysis. |
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Keywords: | Arendt Cavarero Common law King’ s two bodies Political |
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