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The Equality of the Sexes - Three Feminist Texts of the Seventeenth Century (Paperback)
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The Equality of the Sexes - Three Feminist Texts of the Seventeenth Century (Paperback)
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Desmond M. Clarke presents new translations of three of the first
feminist tracts to support explicitly the equality of the sexes.
The alleged inferiority of women's nature and the corresponding
roles that women were (in)capable of exercising in society were
debated in Western culture from the civilization of ancient Greece
to the establishment of early Christian churches. There had also
been some proponents of women's superiority (in comparison with
men) prior to the early modern period. In contrast with both of
these claims, the seventeenth century witnessed the first
publications that argued for the equality of men and women. Among
the most articulate and original defenders of that view were Marie
le Jars de Gournay, Anna Maria van Schurman, and Francois Poulain
de la Barre. Gournay published The Equality of Men and Women in
Paris in 1622, while one of her Dutch correspondents, Van Schurman,
published in Latin her Dissertation in support of women's education
in 1641. Poulain wrote a radical Physical and Moral Discourse
concerning the Equality of Both Sexes in 1673, which he also
published in Paris. These three feminist tracts transformed the
language and conceptual framework in which questions about women's
equality or otherwise were subsequently discussed. During the
eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, anonymous plagiarized editions
and pirated translations of their works appeared in English, as
'vindications' of the rights of women. This edition includes new
translations, from French and Latin, of these three key texts, and
excerpts from the authors' related writings, together with an
extensive introduction to the religious and philosophical context
within which they argued against the traditional view of women's
natural inferiority to men.
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