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- W2337642726 abstract "•t is an odd but indisputable fact that he seventeenth-century women whom we think of as the forerunners and founders of feminism were, almost without exception, Tories.' Since seventeenth-century Tory ideology is often associated with the radical patriarchalism of Robert Filmer, a patriarchalism equating the family and the kingdom and asserting the divinely granted absolute power of the fatherking, 2 historians have been understandably puzzled by the fact that Tory ladies and gentlewomen wrote the earliest extended criticisms of the absolute subordination of women in marriage and the earliest systematic assertions of women's rational and moral equality with men. Some historians have, to be sure, questioned the facile equation of Tory ideology with Filmerian patriarchalism and Whig ideology with Locke's objections to Filmer. 3 Their revisions of the ideological history, however, are no help in explaining the surprising predominance of Tories among seventeenthand early eighteenth-century feminist writers. It may be the case that there were no consistent differences between monarchists and parliamentarians or between Tories and Whigs on the issues of family organization and women's political rights, but then one would expect early feminists to be equally divided between the parties. If there were no gender issues at all on the agenda of either party, then the deep affinity between Toryism and feminism is still buried in obscurity. In one of the most sustained attempts to shed some light on the relationship, Hilda Smith has suggested that it resides not so much in the ideological as in the sociological dimension of Toryism. 4 She argues that women of the classes whose interests were represented by the Tories were relatively deprived of certain opportunities and privileges during the seventeenth century, and this relative deprivation made them conscious of the unfair restrictions placed on the lives of all women. As the privileges of rank were called into question, and as middle-class men acquired new political, economic, and educational advantages, aristocratic" @default.
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- W2337642726 date "2012-02-27" @default.
- W2337642726 modified "2023-09-28" @default.
- W2337642726 title "Embracing the Absolute: The Politics of the Female Subject in Seventeenth-Century England" @default.
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