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Attention to these women’s texts reveals their “social embedment” in Early Modern history and discloses “the historicity of texts and the textuality of history”. 5
Although the prose and poetry written by these women has received wide critical attention, their plays have been neglected. It can be argued that drama is like war in that it constitutes a public event and mediates reality in a way prose and poetry rarely can. John Orr and Dragan Klaic stress the connection between war, terrorism, and drama:
The playwrights considered here—Margaret Cavendish, her two stepdaughters (Jane Cavendish and Elizabeth Brackley), Katherine Philips, and Aphra Behn—were writing in a context in which war had become their “fate”. Thomas Hobbes argued that humans have “a perpetuall and restlesse desire of Power after Power”, and that this inevitably culminates in civil war.7 The female dramatists who are examined in this study concurred with Hobbes that monarchical rule was preferable to anarchy. They endorsed the Hobbesian view that men had to submit to a “[p]ower to keep them in awe”.8 For these writers, each of whom was a zealous Royalist, this power was embodied in the Stuart regime. Cavendish, who experienced the pain of exile during the Interregnum, would certainly have agreed with Hobbes’ justification of Royal power.