Gender and Citizenship

The Dialectics of Subject-Citizenship in Nineteenth Century French Literature and Culture

Gender and Citizenship cover

Gender and Citizenship

The Dialectics of Subject-Citizenship in Nineteenth Century French Literature and Culture

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Description

Moscovici proposes a new understanding of how gender relations were reformulated by both male and female writers in nineteenth-century France. She analyzes the different versions of gendered citizenship elaborated by Friedrich Hegel, George Sand, Honore de Balzac, Auguste Comte and Herculine Barbin revealing a shift from a single dialectical (or male-centered) definition of citizenship to a double dialectical (or bi-gendered) one in which each sex plays an important role in subject-citizenship and is defined as the negation of the other sex. Moscovici further argues that a double dialectical pattern of androgyny endows women with a (relational) cultural identity that secures their paradoxical roles as both representatives and outsiders to subject-citizenship in nineteenth-century French society and culture.

Table of Contents

Chapter 1 Acknowledgments
Chapter 2 Introduction: The Dialectics of Subject-Citizenship
Chapter 3 Theoretical Foundations: Doubling the Foundations
Chapter 4 The Social Model of Citizenship: Comte'sA General View of Positivism
Chapter 5 Gendered Spheres in Balzac'sLa Cousine Bette
Chapter 6 Exemplary Androgyny in Sand'sIndiana
Chapter 7 Gender Trouble in the Diary of Herculine Barbin: Unreading Foucault
Chapter 8 Conclusion: Androgyny and the Chiasmic Economy of Sexual Difference
Chapter 9 Bibliography
Chapter 10 Index
Chapter 11 About the Author

Product details

Published May 10 2000
Format Paperback
Edition 1st
Extent 160
ISBN 9780847696956
Imprint Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Dimensions 229 x 147 mm
Publisher Bloomsbury Publishing

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