Gendering the Renaissance Commonwealth
About this book
This pioneering and innovative study challenges modern assumptions of what constitutes the political and the public in Renaissance thought. Offering gendered readings of a wide array of fifteenth- and sixteenth-century political thinkers, with a particular focus on the two prime thinkers of the early modern state, Niccolò Machiavelli and Jean Bodin, Anna Becker reconstructs a neglected but important classical tradition in political thought. Exploring how 'the political' was incorporated into a wide array of 'private' or 'apolitical' topics by early modern thinkers, Becker demonstrates how both republican and absolutist thinkers - the two poles which organise early modern political thought - relied on gendered justifications. In doing so, she reveals how the foundations of the modern state were significantly shaped by gendered concerns.
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Information
Table of contents
- Cover
- Half-title
- Series information
- Title page
- Copyright information
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Note on the Text
- Introduction
- Chapter 1 The Civic and the Domestic in Aristotelian Thought
- Chapter 2 Friendship, Concord, and Machiavellian Subversion
- Chapter 3 Jean Bodin and the Politics of the Family
- Chapter 4 Inclusions and Exclusions
- Chapter 5 Sovereign Men and Subjugated Women: The Invention of a Tradition
- Conclusion: From Wives to Children, from Husbands to Fathers
- Bibliography
- Index
