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Penny A. Weiss - Gendered community: Rousseau, sex, and politics

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Rousseaus writings reflect paradoxes and apparent inconsistencies with his principled commitments to freedom and equality. In this engrossing work, Penny Weiss wrestles with issues of gender in the works of Rousseau.Weiss attempts to resolve apparent inconsistencies by placing them within the context of Rousseaus political philosophy, while avoiding the impulse to attribute his remarks on the sexes to the sexist times in which he wrote, or to his personal idiosyncracies.A significant contribution to feminist theory, this book addresses the debates concerning Rousseaus understandings of gender, justice, freedom, community, and equality. She also examines how Rousseaus political strategies give rise to a range of important contemporary questions regarding families, citizens, and communities.This new, more complete picture of Rousseaus work will challenge scholars and students of philosophy, politics, and womens studies to look at, and understand, Rousseau in a whole new way. Penny A. Weiss addresses the apparent male/female contradictions that run through the work of the eighteenth-century philosopher Jean-Jacques Rousseau. She argues that Rousseaus defense of sexual differentiation is based on the contribution he perceives it can make to the establishment of community, not on an appeal to some version of natural sex differences. Weiss convincingly demonstrates that Rousseaus political strategy is ultimately unworkable, undermining the very community it was meant to establish.

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title Gendered Community Rousseau Sex and Politics author - photo 1

title:Gendered Community : Rousseau, Sex, and Politics
author:Weiss, Penny A.
publisher:New York University Press
isbn10 | asin:0814792634
print isbn13:9780814792636
ebook isbn13:9780585183732
language:English
subjectRousseau, Jean-Jacques,--1712-1778--Views on sex role, Sex role.
publication date:1993
lcc:HQ1075.W437 1993eb
ddc:305.3
subject:Rousseau, Jean-Jacques,--1712-1778--Views on sex role, Sex role.
Page iii
Gendered Community
Rousseau, Sex and Politics
Penny A. Weiss
Page iv NEW YORK UNIVERSITY PRESS New York and London Copyright 1993 by - photo 2
Page iv
NEW YORK UNIVERSITY PRESS
New York and London
Copyright 1993 by New York University
All rights reserved
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Weiss, Penny A.
Gendered community : Rousseau, sex, and politics / Penny A. Weiss.
p. cm.
Includes bibliographical references (p. 177) and index.
ISBN 0-8147-9263-4 (acid-free paper)
1. Rousseau, Jean-Jacques, 17121778Views on sex role. 2. Sex
role. I. Title.
HQ1075.W437 1993
305.3dc20 93-23909
CIP
New York University Press books are printed on acid-free paper, and their binding materials are chosen for strength and durability.
Manufactured in the United States of America
10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
Page v
From and to "Team Weiswerda"
Page vii
CONTENTS
Acknowledgments
ix
Abbreviations
xvii
Part One
1
Introduction: Gender, Rousseau, and Politics
3
2
Producing Gender: Sex, Freedom, and Equality in Rousseau's Emile
10
3
Anatomy and Destiny: Rousseau, Antifeminism, and Woman's Nature
36
4
Families and Politics: Sex Roles and Community
54
5
The Justice of Sex Roles: "Rousseau, Judge of Jean-Jacques"
75
6
Rousseau and Feminist Revolution: The Impossibility of Gendered Community
90
Part Two
7
Feminism and Communitarianism: Exploring the Relationship
121
8
Gender Bias in Political Theory: (Un)Seeing and (Un)Doing
149
Notes
163
Bibliography
177
Index
185

Page ix
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
Somehow I always thought that sitting down to write about debts incurred in the preparation of this book would be both easy and pleasurable. It is neither. I find it difficult to name what some people have meant to this project. I find it unpleasant to think of the obstacles I have encountered, both institutional and personal. I find myself uncomfortable with aspects of the self-revelation involved. I can't figure out how to avoid writing an autobiography when much of what got me here has roots far back in time. I'm not completely certain for whom I'm writing this. Myself? Those acknowledged within? Some broader audience? I even find it eerie to be undertaking the task that marks the end of the book with which I have been living for so (too) long.
I turn back to a talk I gave last year, "Feminism and Collaborative Research." When writing it I sat down and read the "Acknowledgments" sections of dozens of feminist books which happened to be at hand in my office. At the time I found thisitself a collaborative processa helpful way of getting to what was distinctive about feminist collaboration. Now I look back at it to see if it can help me reflect on the debts incurred in my own writing. I scan the six items that caught my attention as revealing something about collaborative scholarship among feminists. I only sketch them here, for I am just using them as an opportunity for self-reflection.
1. The first feature I noted is the frequent acknowledgment of intellectual debts to the women's movement. In Money, Sex, and Power, for example, Nancy Hartsock expresses her debt to "the political arguments within the feminist movement and the work of feminist theorists," as well as to the
Page x
political activists with whom she had worked a decade earlier on the journal Quest: A Feminist Quarterly. Carole Pateman, in The Sexual Contract, says "my deepest intellectual debt is to the arguments and activities of the feminist movement, which has transformed my view both of political theory and of political life."
I owe almost everything I love about academia to the women's movement. It was feminism that first got me asking big questions about the world, as an undergraduate at the University of South Florida, and it is feminism that continues to motivate me today to grapple with such things as Rousseau's sexual politics (and other, more obviously interesting issues!). Nothing else has provided similar or comparable intellectual, personal, and political challenges all rolled up into one. I am indebted to those who have worked and continue to work to blur the supposedly sacred line separating intellectual and political endeavors, who keep feminist theory grounded in and engaged with people's actual lives. I thank the long line of people who have made it possible to pursue a feminist agenda in academic life and in general, and who know that the political is intellectual and the intellectual isn't "only academic." Because of them, I am forever kept on my toes.
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