Working-Class Women and Republicanism in the French Revolution of 1848

被引:0
|
作者
DeGroat, Judith [1 ]
机构
[1] St Lawrence Univ, Dept Hist, Canton, NY 13617 USA
关键词
Women; republicanism; labour; 1848; Revolution; France; gender;
D O I
10.1080/01916599.2012.674846
中图分类号
B [哲学、宗教];
学科分类号
01 ; 0101 ;
摘要
Following the February Revolution in 1848, working-class women as well as men attempted to hold the government to its promise of the right to work, through street demonstrations, individual and collective demands for work, and participation in the national workshops that had been established in an attempt to address the problem of unemployment in the capital. In the process, these activists articulated what scholars have labelled as a democratic socialist vision of republicanism. In June of 1848, women participated in the insurrection that sought to defend the vision of a social republic. While the republicanism of working-class men and bourgeois women such as George Sand has been examined, studies of working-class women in the first half of the nineteenth century have to this point focused on the romantic socialist influences that shaped their activities, in particular the Saint-Simonian movement. Drawing primarily on individual letters, police interrogations and newspaper reports, a vision of republicanism emerges that includes the ability for women to sustain their families through waged as well as household labour. This concept of republican virtue based itself not in suffrage but in women's capacity to act as both producers and consumers under just and equitable conditions.
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页码:399 / 407
页数:9
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