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Gender, Citizenship and Subjectivity: Some Historical and Theoretical Considerations
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2001
Year
FrenchFrench RevolutionFeminist DebateEarly Nineteenth CenturySocial SciencesGender IdentityHistory Of ScienceFeminist ResearchGender TheoryGender StudiesHumanismGender EqualityProfessional ScienceLanguage StudiesSexismFeminist ScholarshipFrench CultureGendered ContextFeminist PerspectiveFeminist ScienceIndividualismFeminist TheoryFeminist PhilosophyHumanitiesFeminist LiteratureTheoretical ConsiderationsGender Roles
Because the French Revolution failed to produce a widely acceptable definition of citizenship, the limits of manhood suffrage in the early nineteenth century were uncertain. Social practices, in particular scientific activity, served as claims to the status of citizen. By engaging in scientific pastimes, bourgeois Frenchmen asserted that they possessed the rationality and autonomy that liberal theorists associated both with manliness and with civic capacity. However, bourgeois science was never a stable signifier of masculinity or of competence. As professional science emerged, the bourgeois amateur increasingly became the feminised object of satire rather than the sober andmeritorious citizenāscientist.