ABSTRACT

Women and the Ideology of Political Exclusion explores the origin and evolution of the political ideology that has kept women away from centers of political power – from the birth of democracy in ancient Athens to the modern era. In this period of 2500 years, two parallel tracks advanced: while male authority tried to construct an ideology that justified women’s incompatibility with the political organization of the state, women attempted to resist their exclusion and thwart arguments about their inferiority.

Although the issue of women’s status has been studied in detail in specific eras, this interdisciplinary collection extends the boundaries of the discussion. Drawing on a wide range of literary and historical sources, including Herodotus’ Histories, Plato’s Laws, María de San José’s Oaxaca Manuscript, and the work of Émilie Du Châtelet, Mary Boykin Chesnut, and Virginia Woolf, the chapters here reveal the various manifestations of the female-inferiority construct. Such an extensive overview of this historical trajectory promotes a deeper understanding of its causes, permutations, and persistence.

Women may have made great gains toward political power, but they continue to encounter invisible barriers, raised by traditional stereotypes, that block their path to success. Women and the Ideology of Political Exclusion aims to make these barriers visible, raising awareness about the longevity and tenacity of arguments, the roots of which reach classical antiquity.

chapter |30 pages

Introduction

The ideological construct of the ‘inferior female’

part I|172 pages

Greek and Roman antiquity

chapter 2|17 pages

Making men and making women

‘Male superiority’ in archaic Athens

chapter 4|15 pages

Women in Thucydides

Absence and inferiority 1

chapter 7|14 pages

Mechanisms of exclusion

Women between ritual and emotion

chapter 8|13 pages

Dangerous bodies

Plato’s Laws and the ideology of female inferiority in fourth-century Athens 1

chapter 9|14 pages

Politics of the deformed

Women, slaves, and democracy in Aristotle

chapter 11|15 pages

Female reticence in republican Rome

Agency and the performance of exclusion

part II|124 pages

Renaissance through modernity

chapter 12|16 pages

Gendering civic humanism

Political subjecthood and male hegemony in Renaissance Italy

chapter 13|13 pages

The materiality of female agency

Madre María de San José’s writings in seventeenth-century New Spain

chapter 14|13 pages

Woman reclaimed

Subverting feminine exclusion in the works of María de Zayas in seventeenth-century Spain

chapter 15|16 pages

Women and French democracy, 1789–1804

Between the guillotine and the Civil Code limitations

chapter 16|14 pages

Mary Chesnut’s Civil War

Female exclusion and race in the American South

chapter 17|16 pages

A “Society of Outsiders”

Virginia Woolf’s feminist agenda in A Room of One’s Own and Three Guineas

chapter 18|19 pages

Gender equality law in Greece and the European Union

The trajectory from exclusion to inclusion