Rent: Domesticating Passions: Rousseau, Woman, and the Nation

By Henry Fielding, Bertrand A. Goldgar

Overview & Description

"Woman, both real and metaphorical, is at the center of the project to reform politics, which for Rousseau means all human relations," Nicole Fermon asserts in this finely wrought study of how Jean-Jacques Rousseau places the family, women, and love within his political philosophy. Rather than accept conventional conceptual dichotomies of "public" and "private" or "man" and "citizen," Fermon suggests that Rousseau's teachings on the family represent a connecting strand in an overarching philosophy: man not only creates institutions to satisfy his own needs, she writes, "but the needs themselves are crucially formed and transformed by the social setting and the educational experience." Thus the family in general and women in particular play a key role in the Rousseaurean project, as the household becomes "entrusted not only with the reproduction of life and daily necessities, but with the reproduction of sociality itself."

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Book Details

ISBN 10: 0819563056
ISBN 13: 9780819563057
247 pages.
First Published:1/15/1997
List Price:19.95
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Categories this title is in
Literature & Fiction, Nonfiction, All Categories, British, Classics, Fielding, Henry, Contemporary, World Literature, Philosophy, Modern, Politics, Social Sciences, Sociology

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