European University Institute Library

Women and religion in nineteenth-century France, Joan W. Scott

Label
Women and religion in nineteenth-century France, Joan W. Scott
Language
eng
Abstract
This paper explores the connections made between religion and women by French secularizers in the nineteenth century as a way of understanding the effects of what Max Weber called "disenchantment." It asks how differences of sex figured in anti-clerical writings (particularly those of Jules Michelet). And it argues that the conflation of women and religion, an aspect of their simultaneous privatization and their designation as "irrational, " helped secure the place of the difference of sex as the ontological ground for political and social organization in the nations of the West from the seventeenth century onwards
Index
no index present
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
Women and religion in nineteenth-century France
Oclc number
871273985
Responsibility statement
Joan W. Scott
Series statement
EUI working papers. MWP LS, 2013/05EUI papers
Content
Mapped to

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