This interdisciplinary volume of eleven essays examines the idea and the reality of equality between the sexes in early modern France. It aims to contribute towards the development of the history of equality as an intellectual category within the history of political thought.
This volume sets out to examine the ways in which an equality between the sexes is constructed, conceptualised, imagined or realised in early modern France, a period and a country which produced some of the earliest theorisations on equality. In so doing, it aims to contribute towards the development of the history of equality as an intellectual category within the history of political thought, and to situate "the woman question" within that history. The eleven chapters in the volume span the fields of political theory, philosophy, literature, history and history of ideas, bringing together literary scholars, historians, philosophers and scholars of political thought, and examining an extensive range of primary sources. Whilst most of the chapters focus on the conceptualisation of a moral, metaphysical or intellectual equality between the sexes, space is also given to concrete examples of a de facto gender equality in operation. The volume is aimed at scholars and graduate students of political thought, history of philosophy, womens history and gender studies alike. It aims to throw light on the history of Western ideas of equality and difference, questions which continue to preoccupy cultural historians, philosophers, political theorists and feminist critics.
Introduction: thinking equality in the early modern period
1. "Poulain
de la Barre, a logician of equality: prejudice time and the sex of the mind"
2. "Equality, neutrality, differentialism: Descartes, Malebranche, and
Poulain de la Barre"
3. "Gender equality in community: Descartes, Poulain de
la Barre, Fontenelle"
4. "The rhetoric of equality: Marie de Gournay,
linguist and philosopher"
5. "Virtue as a language of equality: gender, moral
androgyny and the representation of archduchess Isabella Clara Eugenia in
seventeenth-century France"
6. "Reading, Acting and Writing Into Being:
Ursulines as Jesuitesses in the French Atlantic World"
7. "The paradoxes of
early modern nuns and gender equality: the case of Port-Royal in early modern
France"
8. "Fashioning Equality and Friendship: Saint-Evremond, Hortense
Mancini and Ninon de Lenclos"
9. "Gender Equality and the Role of Women
Theatre Professionals in Late Seventeenth- and Early Eighteenth-Century
France"
10. "Equality in the printed book: the case of book privileges in
France in the seventeenth century"
11. "The destabilization of gender in the
European Enlightenment and Qing China"
Derval Conroy is Associate Professor of French at University College Dublin. Her research interests include women writers, the history of women in political thought, the history of feminisms and the history of equality, areas on which she has widely published. She is author of Ruling Women. Vol 1. Government, Virtue and the Female Prince in Seventeenth-Century France; Vol 2. Configuring the Female Prince in Seventeenth-Century French Drama (2016).