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Proletarians of the Proletariat: Women's Citizenship in France
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 16 December 2008
Abstract
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- Workers and Citizenship in Europe and North America
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- Copyright © International Labor and Working-Class History, Inc. 1995
References
NOTES
See Christine Bard, Les filles de Marianne: Histoire des Féminismes, 1914–1940 (Paris, 1995). Many thanks to F. Blum, S. Chaperon, G. Houbre, M. Ríot-Sarcey, S. Wahnich, and M. Zancarini-Fournel, whose comments on this article were extremely helpful, and especially to F. Thébaud.
1. See Figures 1 and 2 for illustrations from L'Ouvrière, journal of the Communist party, on the subject of votes for women.Google Scholar
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5. In 1911 there were 7,217,000 employed women and 12,879,000 employed men; in 1936 there were 6,542,000 employed women and 12,650,000 employed men. Figures cited in Marchand, Olivier and Thélot, Claude, Deux Siècles de travail en France (Paris, 1991), 68.Google Scholar
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28. See the presentation of Sohn, Anne-Marie on Bebel, Auguste, Le femme dans le passé, le présent et l'avenir (Paris, 1979; orig. 1891), I–XXI.Google Scholar
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33. Auclert, Hubertine (1848–1914) is considered to be the first French suffragist. It was she who coined the term “feminist” in 1882.Google Scholar See Hause, Steven C., Hubertine Auclert: The French Suffragette (New Haven, 1987).Google Scholar
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51. This phrase is that of Eleanor Roosevelt, feminist, pacifist, and nonconformist wife of the president of the United States; it illustrates a sentiment common to most feminists. Cited in Evans, Sara, Les Américaines: Histoire des femmes aux Etats-Unis (Paris, 1991), 294.Google Scholar
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53. This way of exalting your maternity is simply another way of keeping you down. You are only something because you have the honor, sometimes, of producing a man, of carrying a son in your belly. As for me, ladies, I am not a wife, I am not a mother, and I declare that I do not consider myself less because of it. I am a woman and that is enough, wrote Deraismes, Maria in 1868 (Eve dans l'humanité, ed. Klejman, Laurence [Paris, 1990], 137).Google ScholarMadeleine Pelletier pushed this logic even further by recommending the “virilization of women” as a means of achieving individuation. See Christine Bard, “L'égalité des sexes et la virilisation des femmes,” in Madeleine Pelletier, 91–108.Google Scholar
54. If all feminists agreed to defend the rights of mothers, especially working mothers (and not excluding the rights of children), the defense or rejection of maternity in theoretical discussions occasioned sharp debate. See Knibiehler, Yvonne and Fouquet, Catherine, Histoire des mères (Paris, 1977);Google Scholar and Thébaud, Françoise, Donner la vie: La maternité en France dans l'entre-deux-guerres (Lyon, 1986).Google Scholar
55. The chapter of my dissertation devoted to this subject owes much to the problems posed by Thalmann, Rita in Etre femme sons le IIlème Reich (Paris, 1982).Google Scholar Under the circumstances the responsibility of women as subjects of history must be recognized, even when they are only “passive” or second-class citizens. Koonz, Claudia in Mothers in the Fatherland:Women, the Family and Nazi Politics (New York, 1986) also takes this approach.Google Scholar
56. This was true for the feminists but generally for a large number of other women as well. See Thébaud, Françoise, La femme au temps de la guerre de 14 (Paris, 1986).Google Scholar
57. Marc Bloch argued: “I will not make an exception for women, save only young mothers whose survival is essential for their children. They are absolutely right and I do not see how their courage is less natural, or less obligatory, than our own. L'Etrange défaite: Témoignage écrit en 1940 (Paris, 1990), 164.Google Scholar
58. Julliard, Jacques, Autonomie ouvrière: Etudes sur le syndicalisme d'action directe (Paris, 1988).Google Scholar
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61. See Gaspard, Françoise, Servan-Schreiber, Claude, and Le Gall, Anne, Au pouvoir, citoyennes!: Liberté, égalité, parité (Paris, 1992).Google Scholar Note that both Hubertine Auclert and Monette Thomas, a social activist who was a member of the Comité d'Action Suffragiste, were already demanding parity for women in elected assemblies at the beginning of the century.
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