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In 1848, Edouard de Beaumont created a series of images called Les Vesuviennes, which depicted the Parisian women as "women warriors" or feminists. It was these politically charged images that "severed any connections the woman warrior might have had with an acceptable female role and reconnected her with the tradition of street whore." (Bergman-Carton, 57) In the example shown above, we see how Beaumont used a type of role reversal to shock the viewer. For starters, the woman is clad in men's attire, having taken the pants right off of her husband it seems. The gun in her hand, phallically placed, and the contrasting absent space between her husband's own legs enhances the theme of the women stealing the power away from the man. Of course, the picture would not be complete if the husband did not have three squirming children under his arms.
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- The Early 1800s
- Madame de Stael, an influential writer of the late 1700s and early 1800s, wrote her book Delphine. It was the fictional story of one woman fighting the social codes of France in an attempt to gain individual freedom. Amongst other topics, the book addressed divorce and social unacceptance of spinsterhood. Napolean reacted to her book and her political views by exiling Stael from France. (Her second exile in her lifetime.)
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- It was in 1804 that the Napoleonic civil code came into effect and gave equal civil rights to all men. Under this code, divorce was once again made illegal and Bonaparte made it perfectly clear that women's only purpose was to bear children. Many began to see the marriage arrangement as worse than slavery. After all, a man could free his slave but he was "formally forbidden by the code from abandoning any of his rights over his wife." (Moses, 20) Before, the complexity of the class laws created many loopholes for some women to pass through and avoid aspects of the patriarchal society. With the Civil code giving equal right to all men these loopholes vanished.
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- In 1825, a group of mainly Bourgeois men formed the Saint Simonians, a group pledged to seek out the faults of their society and to develop (often radical) means of change. Amongst their many causes, they believed in the emancipation of women.
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