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A History of Women in the West

Emerging Feminism from Revolution to World War

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  • 652 pages
  • 23 hours of reading

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The French Revolution opened a whole new stage in the history of women, despite their conspicuous absence from the playbill. The coming century would see women’s subordination to men codified in all manner of new laws and rules; and yet the period would also witness the birth of feminism, the unprecedented emergence of women as a collective force in the political arena.The fourth volume in this world-acclaimed series covers the distance between these two poles, between the French Revolution and World War I. It gives us a vibrant picture of a bourgeois century, dynamic and expansive, in which the role of woman in the home was stressed more and more, even as the economic pressures and opportunities of the industrial revolution drew her out of the house; in which woman’s growing role in the family as the center of all morals and virtues pressed her into public service to fight social ills.

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A History of Women in the West, Georges Duby, Michelle Perrot, Geneviève Fraisse, Arthur Goldhammer

Language
Released
1995
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(Paperback),
Book condition
Good
Price
€10.99

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Title
A History of Women in the West
Subtitle
Emerging Feminism from Revolution to World War
Language
English
Publisher
Belknap Press
Released
1995
Format
Paperback
Pages
652
ISBN10
0674403665
ISBN13
9780674403666
Series
Description
The French Revolution opened a whole new stage in the history of women, despite their conspicuous absence from the playbill. The coming century would see women’s subordination to men codified in all manner of new laws and rules; and yet the period would also witness the birth of feminism, the unprecedented emergence of women as a collective force in the political arena.The fourth volume in this world-acclaimed series covers the distance between these two poles, between the French Revolution and World War I. It gives us a vibrant picture of a bourgeois century, dynamic and expansive, in which the role of woman in the home was stressed more and more, even as the economic pressures and opportunities of the industrial revolution drew her out of the house; in which woman’s growing role in the family as the center of all morals and virtues pressed her into public service to fight social ills.