Book contents
- the cambridge history of rights
- The Cambridge History of Rights
- The Cambridge History of Rights
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Contributors to Volume IV
- General Introduction
- A Note on Translations
- Introduction to Volume IV
- Part I A Revolution in Rights?
- 1 Barbeyrac’s Intervention
- 2 Rights and the Bourgeois Revolution
- 3 Social Rights
- 4 Enlightenment Theories of Rights
- 5 Rights, Property, and Politics
- 6 Antislavery in the Age of Rights
- 7 Enlightenment Constitutionalism and the Rights of Man
- 8 Fundamental Rights at the American Founding
- 9 Declarations of Rights
- 10 The Rights of Women (or Women’s Rights)
- 11 The Image of Rights in the French Revolution
- Part II Postrevolutionary Rights
- Part III Rights and Empires
- Index
- References
10 - The Rights of Women (or Women’s Rights)
from Part I - A Revolution in Rights?
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 22 January 2025
- the cambridge history of rights
- The Cambridge History of Rights
- The Cambridge History of Rights
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Contributors to Volume IV
- General Introduction
- A Note on Translations
- Introduction to Volume IV
- Part I A Revolution in Rights?
- 1 Barbeyrac’s Intervention
- 2 Rights and the Bourgeois Revolution
- 3 Social Rights
- 4 Enlightenment Theories of Rights
- 5 Rights, Property, and Politics
- 6 Antislavery in the Age of Rights
- 7 Enlightenment Constitutionalism and the Rights of Man
- 8 Fundamental Rights at the American Founding
- 9 Declarations of Rights
- 10 The Rights of Women (or Women’s Rights)
- 11 The Image of Rights in the French Revolution
- Part II Postrevolutionary Rights
- Part III Rights and Empires
- Index
- References
Summary
This chapter traces the emergence of published women’s rights demands in Western Europe and America. While this history begins with seventeenth-century French debates and broadened through the eighteenth century, it was in the immediate run-up to, and then during the course of, the French Revolution that arguments for women’s civil and political rights flared up and arrived at their modern expression. From Condorcet to Olympe de Gouges, many more writers of both sexes advocated les droits des femmes, demanding legal, educational, economic, and social equality with men. Early expressions of these claims sometimes met with scorn and disbelief, particularly from influential German philosophers, but the claims would nevertheless resurface periodically and gain momentum throughout the nineteenth century, especially during the revolutionary upheavals of 1848 and 1870–1 (and eventually in 1917 Russia), and the women’s suffrage campaigns in the West. Many advocates of women’s rights in France and in the English-speaking world, including Sarah Grimké, made common cause with abolitionists (of Black slavery) and with early social reformers and socialists. As democratic ideas slowly made headway, claims for women’s inclusion and equal rights grew louder and more insistent, ultimately fostering attitudinal changes and proposals for legislative action in many nation-states.
Keywords
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The Cambridge History of Rights , pp. 228 - 259Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2024