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Overview"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." Full Product DetailsAuthor: Sara E. Melzer (Associate Professor of French, Associate Professor of French, University of California at Los Angeles) , Leslie W. Rabine (Associate Professor of French, Associate Professor of French, University of California at Irvine)Publisher: Oxford University Press Inc Imprint: Oxford University Press Inc Dimensions: Width: 15.50cm , Height: 2.30cm , Length: 23.40cm Weight: 0.481kg ISBN: 9780195070163ISBN 10: 019507016 Pages: 312 Publication Date: 21 October 1993 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: To order ![]() Stock availability from the supplier is unknown. We will order it for you and ship this item to you once it is received by us. Table of ContentsReviewsEven in the context of a course that is not devoted exclusively to the Revolutionary Era, this anthology would be useful because of the range of perspectives on women that is offered. --Jenene J. Allison, University of Texas at Austin A wide ranging set of essays for anyone interested in the impact of the French Revolution on women and their lives. --Barbara B. Davis, Antioch College This volume could be quite usefully assigned to advance undergraduates and graduate students. --The Historian Provides a fascinating look at the French Revolution from the perspective of a group of distinguished feminist literary critics, historians, and political theorists....Rebel Daughters, in short, is a rich and compelling source of information on women and the French Revolution. There is something important to be learned and understood in each and every one of its essays. Anyone interested in women's history, the history of the French Revolution, eighteenth- and nineteenth-century literature, eighteenth- and nineteenth-century art, feminist theory and politics, and cultural studies should have this volume on her bookshelf. --Eighteenth-Century Studies Instructive and stimulating for anyone doing historical work. --European Romantic Review [An] excellent collection....So much has been written in recent years on the symbolic meanings of femininity before and during the Revolution that one turns with some relief to the set of essays which deal with the actions and writings of real women during the upheaval....Rebel Daughters stands out among collective volumes for the high quality and overall coherence among its essays. --Journal of Interdisciplinary History 'an interesting collection of articles by scholars in this expanding field ... it is clearly and usefully referenced and, given the variety of subjects broached, will be of interest to those seekng a starting point for their study of the gender issues relating to this turbulent period.' M.-C. Hardie, The Nottingham Trent University, Journal of Gender Studies, Vol. 3, No. 1, 1994 'it is clearly and usefully referenced and, given the variety of subjects broached, will be of interest to those seeking a starting point for their study of the gender issues relating to this turbulent period' M.-C. Hardie, Nottingham Trent Unievrsity, Journal of Gender Studies, 1994 'This collection of essays offers a substantial and original contribution to the growing body of work about women in the revolutionary era... The authors' methods, subject matter, and concerns are far-ranging, so this timely collection will engage literary scholars, historians, art historians, some political theorists, and of course, scholars of women's studies.' Suzanne Desan, University of Wisconsin Even in the context of a course that is not devoted exclusively to the Revolutionary Era, this anthology would be useful because of the range of perspectives on women that is offered. --Jenene J. Allison, University of Texas at Austin A wide ranging set of essays for anyone interested in the impact of the French Revolution on women and their lives. --Barbara B. Davis, Antioch College This volume could be quite usefully assigned to advance undergraduates and graduate students. --The Historian Provides a fascinating look at the French Revolution from the perspective of a group of distinguished feminist literary critics, historians, and political theorists....Rebel Daughters, in short, is a rich and compelling source of information on women and the French Revolution. There is something important to be learned and understood in each and every one of its essays. Anyone interested in women's history, the history of the French Revolution, eighteenth- and nineteenth-century literature, eighteenth- and nineteenth-century art, feminist theory and politics, and cultural studies should have this volume on her bookshelf. --Eighteenth-Century Studies Instructive and stimulating for anyone doing historical work. --European Romantic Review Even in the context of a course that is not devoted exclusively to the Revolutionary Era, this anthology would be useful because of the range of perspectives on women that is offered. --Jenene J. Allison, University of Texas at Austin A wide ranging set of essays for anyone interested in the impact of the French Revolution on women and their lives. --Barbara B. Davis, Antioch College This volume could be quite usefully assigned to advance undergraduates and graduate students. --The Historian Provides a fascinating look at the French Revolution from the perspective of a group of distinguished feminist literary critics, historians, and political theorists....Rebel Daughters, in short, is a rich and compelling source of information on women and the French Revolution. There is something important to be learned and understood in each and every one of its essays. Anyone interested in women's history, the history of the French Revolution, eighteenth- and nineteenth-century literature, eighteenth- and nineteenth-century art, feminist theory and politics, and cultural studies should have this volume on her bookshelf. --Eighteenth-Century Studies Instructive and stimulating for anyone doing historical work. --European Romantic Review [An] excellent collection....So much has been written in recent years on the symbolic meanings of femininity before and during the Revolution that one turns with some relief to the set of essays which deal with the actions and writings of real women during the upheaval....Rebel Daughters stands out among collective volumes for the high quality and overall coherence among its essays. --Journal of Interdisciplinary History Author InformationTab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |