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Liberty in Their Names
The Women Philosophers of the French Revolution
Sandrine Bergès
- 288 pagine
- English
- ePUB (disponibile sull'app)
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Liberty in Their Names
The Women Philosophers of the French Revolution
Sandrine Bergès
Informazioni sul libro
Telling the story of three overlooked revolutionary thinkers, Liberty in Their Names explores the lives and works of Olympe de Gouges, Sophie de Grouchy and Manon Roland. All three were thinking and writing about political philosophy, especially equality and social justice, before the French Revolution. As they became engaged in its efforts, their political writing became more urgent. At a time when women could neither vote nor speak at the Assembly, they became influential through their writings. Yet instead of Gouges, Grouchy and Roland, we speak of Voltaire, Rousseau and Diderot. Sandrine Bergès examines the lives and writings of these trailblazing women philosophers, and their impact on philosophical thought during the French Revolution. Featuring pictures, a timeline and a bibliography of their works, this book offers exciting new insights into the history of political philosophy and of the French Revolution.
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Informazioni
Indice dei contenuti
- Cover
- Half-Title
- Series
- Title
- Contents
- List of figures
- Foreword
- Timeline of the French Revolution
- Note on the revolutionary calendar
- Glossary of people and places
- 1 Women in the Revolution
- 2 The women and the prisons: A walk through eighteenth-century Paris
- 3 Awakening to injustice: The formative years of Gouges, Roland and Grouchy
- 4 Making her own way: Olympe de Gouges
- 5 Speaking for herself: Marie-Jeanne Roland
- 6 Working together: Sophie de Grouchy
- 7 The women on the other side of the channel
- 8 The American dream: From republican model to asylum of freedom
- 9 The abolitionist movement and the revolution
- 10 Women in the city
- Epilogue: Writing out the women: Sophie de Grouchy after the Terror
- A revolutionary bookshelf
- Notes
- References
- Index
- Copyright