6. Sources for a History of Women’s Rights Olympe de Gouges and the Politicization of Literature
Main Article Content
Abstract
Never has historiographic research been so characterized by silence and forgetting as it has in the case of the history of the rights of women. Investigating the history of the rights of women means tackling a double silence: the silence of historiography, and the silence of the laws and of public debate. But the movements for the rights of women in the 19th and 20th centuries have their roots, as Lynn Hunt has shown, precisely in the French Revolution. On the long wave of the politicization of literature in the 18th century, the novels and plays of the revolutionary decade preserve the traces of a culture of emancipation which had to confront a historical practice of exclusion—when the false universal represented by the homme as the bearer of rights was challenged by Olympe de Gouges.
Keywords: History of Human Rights, Olympe de Gouges, Declaration of the Rights of Women, French Revolution, History of French Theatre
Downloads
Article Details
Authors who publish with this journal agree to the following terms:
- Authors retain copyright and grant the journal right of first publication with the work simultaneously licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 Unported License that allows others to share the work with an acknowledgement of the work's authorship and initial publication in this journal.
- Authors are able to enter into separate, additional contractual arrangements for the non-exclusive distribution of the journal's published version of the work (e.g., post it to an institutional repository or publish it in a book), with an acknowledgement of its initial publication in this journal.