Rebel Daughters: Women and the French Revolution
Online ISBN:
9780197715710
Print ISBN:
9780195068863
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
Book
Rebel Daughters: Women and the French Revolution
Published online:
31 October 2023
Published in print:
21 May 1992
Online ISBN:
9780197715710
Print ISBN:
9780195068863
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
Cite
Melzer, Sara E, and Leslie W Rabine (eds), Rebel Daughters: Women and the French Revolution (New York, NY , 1992; online edn, Oxford Academic, 31 Oct. 2023), https://doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780195068863.001.0001, accessed 17 Apr. 2025.
Abstract
This interdisciplinary collection of essays examines the important and paradoxical relation between women and the French Revolution. Although the male leaders of the Revolution depended on the women’s active militant participation, they denied to women the rights they helped to establish. At the same time that women were banned from the political sphere, “woman” was transformed into an allegorical figure which became the very symbol of (masculine) Liberty and Equality. This volume analyzes how the revolutionary process constructed a new gender system at the foundation of modern liberal culture.
Subject
History
Collection:
Oxford Scholarship Online
Contents
-
Front Matter
- 1 Introduction
-
I Women and the Formation of Revolutionary Ideology
Sara E Melzer (ed.) andLeslie W Rabine (ed.) -
II The Other Revolution: Women as Actors in the Revolutionary Period
Sara E Melzer (ed.) andLeslie W Rabine (ed.)-
5
Women and Militant Citizenship in Revolutionary Paris
Darline Gay Levy andHarriet B Applewhite
-
6
“A Woman Who Has Only Paradoxes to Offer”: Olympe de Gouges Claims Rights for Women
Joan Wallach Scott
-
7
Outspoken Women and the Rightful Daughter of the Revolution: Madame de Staël’s Considérations sur la Révolution Française
Linda Orr
-
5
Women and Militant Citizenship in Revolutionary Paris
-
III Constructing the New Gender System in Postrevolutionary Culture
Sara E Melzer (ed.) andLeslie W Rabine (ed.)-
8
Triste Amérique: Atala and the Postrevolutionary Construction of Woman
Naomi Schor
-
9
Being René, Buying Atala: Alienated Subjects and Decorative Objects in Postrevolutionary France
Margaret Waller
-
10
Exotic Femininity and the Rights of Man: Paul et Virginie and Atala, or the Revolution in Stasis
Marie-Claire Vallois
-
11
The Engulfed Beloved: Representations of Dead and Dying Women in the Art and Literature of the Revolutionary Era
Madelyn Gutwirth
-
8
Triste Amérique: Atala and the Postrevolutionary Construction of Woman
-
IV The Birth of Modem Feminism in the Revolution and Its Aftermath
Sara E Melzer (ed.) andLeslie W Rabine (ed.)-
12
“Equality” and “Difference” in Historical Perspective: A Comparative Examination of the Feminisms of French Revolutionaries and Utopian Socialists
Claire Goldberg Moses
-
13
English Women Writers and the French Revolution
Anne k. Mellor
-
14
Flora Tristan: Rebel Daughter of the Revolution
Dominique Desanti
-
12
“Equality” and “Difference” in Historical Perspective: A Comparative Examination of the Feminisms of French Revolutionaries and Utopian Socialists
© Oxford University Press 1992
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