The French Revolution proclaimed the equality of all human beings, yet
women remained less than equal in the new society. The exclusion of
women at the birth of modern democracy required considerable
justification, and by tracing the course of this reasoning through early
nineteenth-century texts, Genevieve Fraisse maps a moment of crisis in
the history of sexual difference.
Through an analysis of literary, religious, legal, philosophical, and
medical texts, Fraisse links a range of positions on women's proper role
in society to specific historical and rhetorical circumstances. She
shows how the Revolution marked a sharp break in the way women were
represented in language, as traditional bantering about the war of the
sexes gave way to serious discussions of the political and social
meanings of sexual difference. Following this discussion on three
different planes--the economical, the political, and the
biological--Fraisse looks at the exclusion of women against the backdrop
of democracy's inevitable lie: the affirmation of an equality so
abstract it was impossible to concretely apply.
This study of the place of sexual equality in the founding moment of
democracy offers insight into a persistent question: whether female
emancipation is to be found through the achievement of equality with men
or in the celebration of female difference.