Lost Purity. Social in Nineteenth and Twentieth-century Feminisms

Authors

  • Paola Persano University of Macerata

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.6092/issn.1825-9618/6203

Keywords:

Suffragism/Anti-Suffragism, Sexual Difference, Joan Wallach Scott, Hubertine Auclert, Social Purity

Abstract

‘Social Purity’ appears in a part of the French and Anglo-Saxon (Britain and the United States) nineteenth-twentieth century’s feminisms, as a mean for many claims: from the full recognition of sexual difference in Hubertine Auclert’s social and ‘differentialist’ republicanism in France to Josephine Butler’s refusal of any purity imposed from above in England, until the absolute turn of the idea of women’s moral superiority and the equal and opposite force to the final exit from ‘the social’ by the American ‘New Womanism’, individualizing and de-feminizing the act of sexual liberation. All this in a continuous play of actions and reactions, sometimes paradoxical, weaving together suffragism and anti-suffragism, contestation of the conjugal complementarity and the never overcome temptations of hetero or self-control.

 

Published

2016-07-05

How to Cite

Persano, P. (2016). Lost Purity. Social in Nineteenth and Twentieth-century Feminisms. Scienza & Politica. Per Una Storia Delle Dottrine, 28(54). https://doi.org/10.6092/issn.1825-9618/6203

Issue

Section

The Feminist Discourse. History and Critique of Modern Political Canon (ed. by Eleonora Cappuccilli and Roberta Ferrari)