Women’s participation in the revolutionary events in France between 1789 and 1795 has only recently been given nuanced treatment. Early twentieth-century historians of the French Revolution are typified by Jaures, who, though sympathetic to the women’s movement of his own time, never even mentions its antecedents in revolutionary France. Even today most Badinter, Godineau, and Roudinesco, however, should signal a much-needed reassessment of women’s participation.
Godineau and Roudinesco point to three significant phases in that participation. The first, up to mid-1792, involved those women who wrote political tracts. Typical of their orientation to theoretical issues—in Godineau’s view, without practical effect—is Marie Gouze’s Declaration of the Rights of Women. The emergence of vocal middle-class women’s political clubs marks participation by more than a narrow range of the population—women or men—came only with the Revolution.
What makes the recent studies particularly compelling, however, is not so much their organization of chronology as their unflinching willingness to confront the reasons for the collapse of the women’s movement. For Landes and Badinter, the necessity of women’s having to speak in the established vocabularies of certain intellectual and political traditions vocabulary and a violently extremist viewpoint that unfortunately was even more damaging to their political interests.
Each of these scholars has a different political agenda and takes a different approach—Godineau, for example, works with police archives while Roudinesco uses explanatory schema from modern psychology. Yet, admirably, each gives center stage to a group that previously has been marginalized, or at best undifferentiated, by historians. And in the case cost to the women of the Revolution of speaking in borrowed voices.
What this question is testing
Topic
The author is reviewing a wave of recent books that finally take seriously what women were doing during the French Revolution — something earlier historians mostly ignored.
Framework
Highlight Noteworthy. The author isn't debating opponents; they're celebrating the new scholarship while flagging the studies' most important contribution.
Main Point
Here's the simpler version: for a long time, women's role in the French Revolution barely got mentioned. Recent scholars finally walked through it carefully — they identified three phases of women's activism and, most importantly, explained why women's political organizing eventually collapsed. The collapse came partly because women had to express themselves through other people's political language (Rousseau's, then the Jacobins'), and that borrowed vocabulary trapped them.
P1: A long-overdue topic
Earlier historians barely mentioned women's revolutionary participation, even ones sympathetic to women's movements. The new generation of scholars (Landes, Badinter, Godineau, Roudinesco) is finally fixing that.
P2: Three waves of women's activism
First, women writing political tracts (like Marie Gouze's Declaration — Godineau treats it as theoretical, not really moving the needle in practice). Second, middle-class women's clubs, originally philanthropic, eventually pushing for military service. Third, the 1795 famine triggered a mass movement that the army crushed.
P3: Why it all fell apart
The most striking part of the recent studies, the author says, is that they explain the collapse. Landes and Badinter argue that women had to fit their politics into Rousseau's framework (with men in public, women in private) — and that limited what they could resist. When women allied with radical Jacobin men, they picked up the Jacobins' extremist vocabulary, which actually hurt them politically.
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