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E-raamat: Women and Republicanism

Edited by (Visiting Lecturer, School of Law, King's College London), Edited by (British Academy Global Professor of Philosophy, University of York)
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The history of republican philosophy has long been regarded as an exclusively male endeavour. In recent years, scholars have highlighted and restored the undeniable republican contributions of a select group of women. Bergès and Coffee here collect ten essays that examine the important philosophical contributions made by women to the history of republican political thought. The contributors reveal the depth and richness of women's political thought within the republican paradigm. They highlight the history of women's exclusion in republican discourse, not only as citizens and thinkers but even within the masculine-coded language and ideas embedded in its key terms, such as virtue, that have been transmitted across generations. Alongside chapters on figures whose republican contribution has been well attested, such as Mary Wollstonecraft and Catharine Macaulay, the volume also highlights the work of lesser known republican scholars, including by French (Louise de Keralio, Germaine de Staël), Italian (Rosa Califronia), Brazilian (Nísia Floresta), Turkish (Halide Edip, Nezihe Muhiddin) and African American women (Maria Stewart, Harriet Jacobs, Anna Julia Cooper). Women in Republicanism broadens the conversation about republican history from its Anglo and North American core to embrace a more global understanding, particularly in the context of emancipatory struggle.
Series editors' foreword

Preface

1. Recognising Women's Contribution to the History of Republican Theorising
Alan Coffee and Sandrine Bergès

2. The Destructive Effects of Inequality. Mary Wollstonecraft and Strong
Republican Egalitarianism
Lena Halldenius

3. Between Domesticity and Publicity: The Revolutionary Republicanism of
Louise de Keralio
Nicolai von Eggers

4. Republican Echoes and Women's Freedom in Italy.
From Rosa Califronia's Breve Difesa dei Diritti delle Donne to the Jacobin
Triennium
Serena Vantin

5. The Republicanism of 'The Mother of Liberalism' How Germaine de Staël's
Love of Liberty Guided her Ideas About the Constitution
Eveline de Groot

6. From Utopian Republicanism towards Scientific Socialism
Karen Green

7. Republicanism in the mirror: The case for equality after colonization
Nastassja Pugliese

8. Sympathy in Struggle against Servitude: Maria Stewart's Black Civic
Republicanism
Philip Yaure

9. Sexual Violence and the Transition to Freedom in Harriet Jacobs's
Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl
Alan Coffee

10. Anna Julia Cooper on the French Republican's Attitude to Slavery
Sandrine Bergès

11. The Struggle For Women's Rights In Turkey: Pioneering Suffragettes and
Republicanism Banu Turnaoglu and Suhnaz Yilmaz
Sandrine Bergès writes books and articles on women in the history of philosophy, including Mary Wollstonecraft, Sophie de Grouchy and Olympe de Gouges. She runs the blog Feminist History of Philosophy and is one of the founders of the new SWIP-Turkey. She took leave in 2024 from her position at the University of Bilkent, Ankara to become the British Global Professor at the University of York.

Alan Coffee teaches social and political philosophy at King's College London. His research concerns theories of political freedom, justice and power, particularly the civic republican conception of freedom. He has a special interest in the work of eighteenth and early nineteenth-century women and African-American writers.