[Return to Query]
“‘L’idée’ salique selon Louise Dupin” (Book Section)
Title: “‘L’idée’ salique selon Louise Dupin”
Author: Rebecca Wilkin
Author: Angela Hunter
Editor: Anne-Lise Rey
Abstract: An edition of two chapters of Dupin’s Ouvrage sur les femmes (in French) for a collection devoted to women philosophers.
Year: 2022
Access Model: print book
Publisher: Classiques Garnier
Book Title: Philosophies: Féminin pluriel. Anthologie des femmes philosophes
“‘Réformez vos contrats!’: From the marriage contract to the social contract in Louise Dupin and Jean-Jacques Rousseau” (Article)
Title: “‘Réformez vos contrats!’: From the marriage contract to the social contract in Louise Dupin and Jean-Jacques Rousseau”
Author: Rebecca Wilkin
Abstract: I trace key arguments of Jean–Jacques Rousseau’s political philosophy to Louise Dupin’s Ouvrage sur les femmes to reveal that early modern feminist thought contributed directly to social contract theory. Rousseau applied Dupin’s mockery of the marriage contract to dismiss as fraudulent the politi- cal contract that previous natural law philosophers had imagined between subjects and sovereign. He then made mutually exclusive property the foundation of the republican social contract, just as Dupin had stipulated separately owned property as the condition of equality in marriage. Yet Rousseau rejected the feminist content of Dupin’s arguments, despite incorporating her strategies. Paradoxically, while Dupin, a monarchist, construed marriage along the egalitarian lines of a friendship based on ‘la douceur du commerce’, the republican Rousseau invested men with the douceur of the absolute sovereign, masking the contractual character of marriage by positing women’s subordination to men as a matter of passionate attachment.
Year: 2021
Primary URL: https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/20563035.2021.1924010
Format: Journal
Periodical Title: Early Modern French Studies
“‘The spirit of laws is not the spirit of justice’: Louise Dupin and Networks of Critique” (Conference Paper/Presentation)
Title: “‘The spirit of laws is not the spirit of justice’: Louise Dupin and Networks of Critique”
Author: Angela Hunter
Abstract: A presentation on Louise Dupin's participation in a critique of Montesquieu's "On the Spirit of the Laws," jointly authored with her husband and several others. The paper analyzes the way that Enlightenment knowledge networks included and excluded women's participation, considering salons as a locus for study and arguing that Dupin's major work -- the Ouvrage sur les femmes -- was a knowledge network in its own right.
Date: 4/29/2021
Conference Name: American Society for Eighteenth-Century Studies
Impact, Influence, Importance : How to « Measure » the Contribution of Women to the History of Philosophy? (Article)
Title: Impact, Influence, Importance : How to « Measure » the Contribution of Women to the History of Philosophy?
Author: Rebecca Wilkin
Abstract: This article identifies one of the causes of the exclusion of women from the history of philosophy: the privileging of causal influence as its narrative principle. Influence is often misunderstood to result from a work’s inherent power, when in fact it results from the reader’s acquiescence to the ideas expressed therein. Readers approach texts with biases, and influence is therefore the result of those biases. I use the works of Gabrielle Suchon and Louise Dupin to reveal the way the criterion of influence reinforces the systematic disenfranchisement of women as people and as philosophers.
Year: 2022
Access Model: subscription only
Format: Journal
Periodical Title: Revue XVIIe siècle
“Article 23 (‘On Education’) of Louise Dupin’s Work on Women: Snapshot of a Mobile Manuscript” (Conference Paper/Presentation)
Title: “Article 23 (‘On Education’) of Louise Dupin’s Work on Women: Snapshot of a Mobile Manuscript”
Author: Rebecca Wilkin
Abstract: Taking chapter 23 ("On Education") of Louise Dupin's Work on Women as an example, I focus on manuscript features that disappear in printed books: the play of hands that inform us about the process of collaboration from note-taking to final draft; the modular organization of the work-in-progress through a system of loose-leaf folios that could be moved among folders; and the evolving overall architecture of the work as evidenced by the reordering of articles. These observations beg the question of what we are doing when we study the manuscripts of neglected, unpublished, and therefore unknown texts. If the manuscript to a printed text is the backstory to the story, what is a manuscript that never made it to print (the final form of so much writing by early modern women)—particularly a manuscript like Dupin’s, of which no part was circulated?
Date: 3/31/2022
Conference Name: American Society for Eighteenth-Century Studies
“Feminist Recovery Work Meets White Feminism: Louise Dupin’s Work on Women” (Conference Paper/Presentation)
Title: “Feminist Recovery Work Meets White Feminism: Louise Dupin’s Work on Women”
Author: Rebecca Wilkin
Abstract: Through her survey of women’s freedom and authority around the world, and of the labor they share with men, Dupin was perhaps the first to engage in feminist recovery work on a global scale. She condemns slavery and looks for examples of ordinary women's agency in Africa, Asia, and the Americas. Yet we know that Dupin's personal wealth was built in part on investments in the slave trade made by her father and husband, and she conveniently ignores that the labor she praises in women "in the colonies" is coerced. This paper considers Dupin as an example of the "White Feminism" that Rafia Zakaria traces to the Enlightenment, before reflecting on the sterility of canceling a woman who chose not to publish her work in anticipation of being the target of the misogyny she observes in social settings.
Date: 04/22/2022
Conference Name: “Method and the History of Philosophy: Extending New Narratives”
Permalink: https://securegrants.neh.gov/publicquery/products.aspx?gn=RQ-271249-20