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Sisters or Citizens?

Sisters or Citizens?

Sisters or Citizens?

Women and Socialism in France since 1876
Charles Sowerwine
November 2008
Paperback
9780521089906
£32.00
GBP
Paperback

    A century ago, just as today, working women faced oppression both as women and as workers. On which front would they fight? Were they sisters of the feminists, or citizens, members of the workers' movement? This book is a study of their responses to this dilemma. The French feminist movement claimed to speak for working women as well as for their wealthier sisters. But by the end of the nineteenth century, most politically minded working women rejected feminism, which seemed to them a movement for middle-class women.

    Product details

    November 2008
    Paperback
    9780521089906
    272 pages
    229 × 152 × 15 mm
    0.4kg
    Available

    Table of Contents

    • Part I. Feminism and socialism 1876–1900:
    • 1. Women and the beginnings of the socialist movement 1876–82
    • 2. Socialist parties in search of women 1882–99
    • 3. Feminists in search of a mass base: the rise and fall of social feminism 1889–1900
    • Part II. Origins of the socialist women's movement 1899–1914:
    • 4. The Groups Feminists Socialists 1899–1905
    • 5. Women and the SFIO 1905–14
    • 6. The Groups des Femmes Socialistes 1913–14
    • Part III. Development and decline of the socialist women's movement 1914–79:
    • 7. The First World War and socialist women 1914–20
    • 8. Reconstruction, decline, and rebirth 1921–79.
      Author
    • Charles Sowerwine