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Women's Rights and the French Revolution
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Table of Contents

Preface
Introduction
1. Montauban
2. Paris, Pleasures
3. Olympe's Revolution
4. The Last Two Years
Conclusion
Notes
Bibliography

About the Author

Sophie Mousset is an avid writer, photographer, and traveler who spends most of her time abroad and on the high seas as a crew member of the three-masted ship, The Boudeuse.

Reviews

Mousset writes a lyrical prose that just begins to suggest the influence and impact of this notorious political writer and provocateur on her contemporaries. The biography demonstrates de Gouges's significance as an author and the power of her arguments for students and scholars focused on women's political history. -- Wendy Gunther-Canada, The Review of Politics -Sophie Mousset's absorbing biography of the bold, brave, and thought-provoking Olympe de Gouges (1748-1793) convincingly rehabilitates the importance of an unjustly overlooked intellectual from the French Revolutionary period. Often dismissed as a coquettish socialite and mere agitator, the 'tall, beautiful, and witty' Olympe de Gouges was in fact a pioneering social thinker, an uncompromising engaging playwright, a far-seeing feminist, and indeed the drafter, in September 1791 of an extraordinary, little-known, Declaration of the Rights of Woman and the Female Citizen. As Mousset impressively shows, Olympe de Gouges developed a forcible, but also subtle and deep-probing, moral and political conscience, before she herself a revolutionary fell victim to the same revolutionary excesses that she had perceived, defined, and incisively denounced (In 1793, she was the first woman to be guillotined after Marie-Antoinette). By bringing back to life this intrepid yet percipient writer, Mousset challenges us to take a new look at the history of women's rights, at rarely mentioned aspects of French revolutionary thought and, perhaps most of all, at the perennial dilemma of balancing effective political action, objective discernment, and generous restraint.- --John Taylor, author of Paths to Contemporary French Literature -Mousset's biography of Olympe de Gouges is the first one available in English. . . . The book is written for a general audience, without theoretical or scholarly apparatus. . . . Olympe's story is relevant to feminist history, and also to debates about the meaning of the French Revolution.- --Joan Roelofs, Science & Society

Mousset writes a lyrical prose that just begins to suggest the influence and impact of this notorious political writer and provocateur on her contemporaries. The biography demonstrates de Gouges's significance as an author and the power of her arguments for students and scholars focused on women's political history. -- Wendy Gunther-Canada, The Review of Politics "Sophie Mousset's absorbing biography of the bold, brave, and thought-provoking Olympe de Gouges (1748-1793) convincingly rehabilitates the importance of an unjustly overlooked intellectual from the French Revolutionary period. Often dismissed as a coquettish socialite and mere agitator, the 'tall, beautiful, and witty' Olympe de Gouges was in fact a pioneering social thinker, an uncompromising engaging playwright, a far-seeing feminist, and indeed the drafter, in September 1791 of an extraordinary, little-known, Declaration of the Rights of Woman and the Female Citizen. As Mousset impressively shows, Olympe de Gouges developed a forcible, but also subtle and deep-probing, moral and political conscience, before she herself a revolutionary fell victim to the same revolutionary excesses that she had perceived, defined, and incisively denounced (In 1793, she was the first woman to be guillotined after Marie-Antoinette). By bringing back to life this intrepid yet percipient writer, Mousset challenges us to take a new look at the history of women's rights, at rarely mentioned aspects of French revolutionary thought and, perhaps most of all, at the perennial dilemma of balancing effective political action, objective discernment, and generous restraint." --John Taylor, author of Paths to Contemporary French Literature "Mousset's biography of Olympe de Gouges is the first one available in English. . . . The book is written for a general audience, without theoretical or scholarly apparatus. . . . Olympe's story is relevant to feminist history, and also to debates about the meaning of the French Revolution." --Joan Roelofs, Science & Society

"Sophie Mousset's absorbing biography of the bold, brave, and thought-provoking Olympe de Gouges (1748-1793) convincingly rehabilitates the importance of an unjustly overlooked intellectual from the French Revolutionary period. Often dismissed as a coquettish socialite and mere agitator, the 'tall, beautiful, and witty' Olympe de Gouges was in fact a pioneering social thinker, an uncompromising engaging playwright, a far-seeing feminist, and indeed the drafter, in September 1791 of an extraordinary, little-known, Declaration of the Rights of Woman and the Female Citizen. As Mousset impressively shows, Olympe de Gouges developed a forcible, but also subtle and deep-probing, moral and political conscience, before she herself a revolutionary fell victim to the same revolutionary excesses that she had perceived, defined, and incisively denounced (In 1793, she was the first woman to be guillotined after Marie-Antoinette). By bringing back to life this intrepid yet percipient writer, Mousset challenges us to take a new look at the history of women's rights, at rarely mentioned aspects of French revolutionary thought and, perhaps most of all, at the perennial dilemma of balancing effective political action, objective discernment, and generous restraint." --John Taylor, author of Paths to Contemporary French Literature "Mousset's biography of Olympe de Gouges is the first one available in English. . . . The book is written for a general audience, without theoretical or scholarly apparatus. . . . Olympe's story is relevant to feminist history, and also to debates about the meaning of the French Revolution." --Joan Roelofs, Science & Society

"Olympe's story is relevant to feminist history, and also to debates about the meaning of the French Revolution." -Science & Society

"Sophie Mousset's absorbing biography of the bold, brave, and thought-provoking Olympe de Gouges (1748-1793) convincingly rehabilitates the importance of an unjustly overlooked intellectual from the French Revolutionary period. Often dismissed as a coquettish socialite and mere agitator, the "tall, beautiful, and witty" Olympe de Gouges was in fact a pioneering social thinker, an uncompromising engag playwright, a far-seeing feminist, and indeed the drafter-in September 1791of an extraordinary, little-known, "Declaration of the Rights of Woman and the Female Citizen." As Mousset impressively shows, Olympe de Gouges developed a forcible, but also subtle and deep-probing, moral and political conscience, before she herselfa revolutionaryfell victim to the same revolutionary excesses that she had perceived, defined, and incisively denounced. (In 1793, she was the first woman to be guillotined after Marie-Antoinette.) By bringing back to life this intrepid yet percipient writer, Mousset challenges us to take a new look at the history of women's rights, at rarely mentioned aspects of French revolutionary thought and, perhaps most of all, at the perennial dilemma of balancing effective political action, objective discernment, and generous restraint." John Taylor, author of "Paths to Contemporary French Literature"

"Olympe's story is relevant to feminist history, and also to debates about the meaning of the French Revolution."-Science & Society

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