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Compulsory Domesticity? - Comparing gender notions of Jean-Jacques Rousseau and John Stuart Mill in "Émile" and "The Subjection of Women"

Compulsory Domesticity? - Comparing gender notions of Jean-Jacques Rousseau and John Stuart Mill in "Émile" and "The Subjection of Women"

von Bert Bobock
Softcover - 9783638952514
17,95 €
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Beschreibung

Seminar paper from the year 2005 in the subject Literature - Comparative Literature, grade: 1,0, Brown University (Department of History), course: European Intellectual History: Discovering the Modern, language: English, abstract: Although political philosophers like Jean-Jacques Rousseau, John Locke and Thomas Hobbes thought it important that all individuals be free to govern themselves, they often based their theories of representative democracy on the nuclear family as the smallest unit in society. Since families are formed by individuals, how is it possible that these thinkers dismissed the voice of one half of the population - women?

This essay examines how gender notions shifted in the century between the publication of Rousseaüs Émile in 1762 and Mill¿s ¿The Subjection of Women¿ in 1869. How can Rousseaüs general desire for equality and freedom of the individual be combined with his claim that women need to be complementary and serviceable to men? How does Mill¿s concept of domesticity and his assumption that women would prefer the domestic realm, when given the choice between having a career or creating a home, relate to Rousseaüs ideas of domesticity?

Details

Verlag GRIN Verlag
Ersterscheinung 19. Juni 2008
Maße 21 cm x 14.8 cm x 0.3 cm
Gewicht 51 Gramm
Format Softcover
ISBN-13 9783638952514
Auflage 4. Auflage
Seiten 24