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La Citoyenne, No. 78, 15 novembre - 2 décembre 1883
edited by Hubertine Auclert, 1848-1914, in La Citoyenne, No. 78, November 15-December 2, 1883 (Paris, Ile-de-France: La Citoyenne, 1883), 4 page(s)
La Citoyenne was a French feminist newspaper, founded, funded, and edited by Hubertine Auclert, with the primary aim of promoting women’s suffrage. Auclert, the leader of France’s fledgling suffrage movement from 1880 to her death in 1914, lived in Algeria from 1888-1892. This experience intensified and shaped...
edited by Hubertine Auclert, 1848-1914, in La Citoyenne, No. 78, November 15-December 2, 1883 (Paris, Ile-de-France: La Citoyenne, 1883), 4 page(s)
Description
La Citoyenne was a French feminist newspaper, founded, funded, and edited by Hubertine Auclert, with the primary aim of promoting women’s suffrage. Auclert, the leader of France’s fledgling suffrage movement from 1880 to her death in 1914, lived in Algeria from 1888-1892. This experience intensified and shaped her already existing interest in the colony. La Citoyenne, published from 1881-1891, was the first French feminist newspaper to addres...
La Citoyenne was a French feminist newspaper, founded, funded, and edited by Hubertine Auclert, with the primary aim of promoting women’s suffrage. Auclert, the leader of France’s fledgling suffrage movement from 1880 to her death in 1914, lived in Algeria from 1888-1892. This experience intensified and shaped her already existing interest in the colony. La Citoyenne, published from 1881-1891, was the first French feminist newspaper to address questions of empire. In this issue, Auclert returns to the relationship between, republicanism, clericalism, and women’s enfranchisement. For example, if women are not capable of voting because of their penchant toward religiosity, priests likewise should not be able to vote. A second front page article discusses the opening of the first secondary school for girls in Paris. An article inside discusses the commemoration of Catherine Pochelat at the Carnavalet Museum. Pochelat volunteered in the Enfants-Rouges battalion during the French Revolution. Abstract created by Jaime Wadowiec.
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Collection
Women and Social Movements, Modern Empires Since 1820
Field of Study
Women and Social Movements
Content Type
Periodical issue
Contributor
Hubertine Auclert, 1848-1914
Date Published / Released
1883
Publisher
La Citoyenne
Series
La Citoyenne
Topic / Theme
Political and Human Rights, Social Reform and Political Activism, Suffrage, Social and Cultural Rights, Political Parties and Other Male Dominated Organizations, French, Industrialization and Western Global Hegemony (1750–1914)
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La Citoyenne, No. 79, 3 décembre 1883 - 6 janvier 1884
edited by Hubertine Auclert, 1848-1914, in La Citoyenne, No. 79, December 3, 1883-January 6, 1884 (Paris, Ile-de-France: La Citoyenne, 1883), 4 page(s)
La Citoyenne was a French feminist newspaper, founded, funded, and edited by Hubertine Auclert, with the primary aim of promoting women’s suffrage. Auclert, the leader of France’s fledgling suffrage movement from 1880 to her death in 1914, lived in Algeria from 1888-1892. This experience intensified and shaped...
edited by Hubertine Auclert, 1848-1914, in La Citoyenne, No. 79, December 3, 1883-January 6, 1884 (Paris, Ile-de-France: La Citoyenne, 1883), 4 page(s)
Description
La Citoyenne was a French feminist newspaper, founded, funded, and edited by Hubertine Auclert, with the primary aim of promoting women’s suffrage. Auclert, the leader of France’s fledgling suffrage movement from 1880 to her death in 1914, lived in Algeria from 1888-1892. This experience intensified and shaped her already existing interest in the colony. La Citoyenne, published from 1881-1891, was the first French feminist newspaper to addres...
La Citoyenne was a French feminist newspaper, founded, funded, and edited by Hubertine Auclert, with the primary aim of promoting women’s suffrage. Auclert, the leader of France’s fledgling suffrage movement from 1880 to her death in 1914, lived in Algeria from 1888-1892. This experience intensified and shaped her already existing interest in the colony. La Citoyenne, published from 1881-1891, was the first French feminist newspaper to address questions of empire. In this issue, Auclert takes on the resistance by typographers to the entrance of women into their profession. While accepting foreign men who work for less than union wages, they refuse women, including spinsters, widows and poor wives who must work for their living. Other articles deal with the benefits of international alliances through marriage and courses on anthropological perspectives comparing men and women. Abstract created by Marilyn J. Boxer.
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Collection
Women and Social Movements, Modern Empires Since 1820
Field of Study
Women and Social Movements
Content Type
Periodical issue
Contributor
Hubertine Auclert, 1848-1914
Date Published / Released
1883
Publisher
La Citoyenne
Series
La Citoyenne
Topic / Theme
Peace, International Governance, and International Law, Work and Class Identity, Political and Human Rights, Marital Status, Rights to Work, Equal Rights for Women, Social and Cultural Rights, French, Industrialization and Western Global Hegemony (1750–1914)
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La Citoyenne, No. 80, janvier 1884
edited by Hubertine Auclert, 1848-1914, in La Citoyenne, No. 80, January 4, 1884 (Paris, Ile-de-France: La Citoyenne, 1884), 4 page(s)
La Citoyenne was a French feminist newspaper, founded, funded, and edited by Hubertine Auclert, with the primary aim of promoting women’s suffrage. Auclert, the leader of France’s fledgling suffrage movement from 1880 to her death in 1914, lived in Algeria from 1888-1892. This experience intensified and shaped...
edited by Hubertine Auclert, 1848-1914, in La Citoyenne, No. 80, January 4, 1884 (Paris, Ile-de-France: La Citoyenne, 1884), 4 page(s)
Description
La Citoyenne was a French feminist newspaper, founded, funded, and edited by Hubertine Auclert, with the primary aim of promoting women’s suffrage. Auclert, the leader of France’s fledgling suffrage movement from 1880 to her death in 1914, lived in Algeria from 1888-1892. This experience intensified and shaped her already existing interest in the colony. La Citoyenne, published from 1881-1891, was the first French feminist newspaper to addres...
La Citoyenne was a French feminist newspaper, founded, funded, and edited by Hubertine Auclert, with the primary aim of promoting women’s suffrage. Auclert, the leader of France’s fledgling suffrage movement from 1880 to her death in 1914, lived in Algeria from 1888-1892. This experience intensified and shaped her already existing interest in the colony. La Citoyenne, published from 1881-1891, was the first French feminist newspaper to address questions of empire. In this issue, Auclert discusses legislation proposed by Georges Roche, a deputy in parliament, who suggested that women should have the right to vote and to serve in municipal councils. While Auclert is critical of the slow advance of suffrage in France, a second article declares “Victory” in the territory of Washington, in the United States, for granting women the right to vote. Pieces inside the periodical discuss Laura White, an American architect, and deliberate women’s capacity as soldiers in combat. Abstract created by Jaime Wadowiec.
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Collection
Women and Social Movements, Modern Empires Since 1820
Field of Study
Women and Social Movements
Content Type
Periodical issue
Contributor
Hubertine Auclert, 1848-1914
Date Published / Released
January 1884, 1884
Publisher
La Citoyenne
Series
La Citoyenne
Person Discussed
Rosa Bonheur, 1822-1899
Topic / Theme
Political and Human Rights, Social Reform and Political Activism, Suffrage, Social and Cultural Rights, Political Parties and Other Male Dominated Organizations, French, Industrialization and Western Global Hegemony (1750–1914)
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La Citoyenne, No. 81, février 1884
edited by Hubertine Auclert, 1848-1914, in La Citoyenne, No. 81, February, 1884 (La Citoyenne, 1884), 4 page(s)
La Citoyenne was a French feminist newspaper, founded, funded, and edited by Hubertine Auclert, with the primary aim of promoting women’s suffrage. Auclert, the leader of France’s fledgling suffrage movement from 1880 to her death in 1914, lived in Algeria from 1888-1892. This experience intensified and shaped...
edited by Hubertine Auclert, 1848-1914, in La Citoyenne, No. 81, February, 1884 (La Citoyenne, 1884), 4 page(s)
Description
La Citoyenne was a French feminist newspaper, founded, funded, and edited by Hubertine Auclert, with the primary aim of promoting women’s suffrage. Auclert, the leader of France’s fledgling suffrage movement from 1880 to her death in 1914, lived in Algeria from 1888-1892. This experience intensified and shaped her already existing interest in the colony. La Citoyenne, published from 1881-1891, was the first French feminist newspaper to addres...
La Citoyenne was a French feminist newspaper, founded, funded, and edited by Hubertine Auclert, with the primary aim of promoting women’s suffrage. Auclert, the leader of France’s fledgling suffrage movement from 1880 to her death in 1914, lived in Algeria from 1888-1892. This experience intensified and shaped her already existing interest in the colony. La Citoyenne, published from 1881-1891, was the first French feminist newspaper to address questions of empire. This issue includes the first of a four-part series of articles titled, “La femme arabe” (“The Arab Woman”), written by “X,” to whom the paper referred as “Un de nos correspondants…d’Alger.” (“One of Our Algerian Correspondents”). The article explained aspects of Arab women’s lives and status, comparing them to those of French women and questioning the supposedly superior conditions of French women’s lives. Another piece, “Le Remède est là” (“The Remedy is Here”), argued that the current economic crisis would be remedied if women had a role in governmental administration. In “La faim mortelle: supprimée par les femmes” (“Deadly Hunger: Ended by Women”), the anonymous author “Un agronome” (“An Agronomist”) argued that men had failed to feed the hungry, and women should be given the opportunity to do so through governmental participation.
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Collection
Women and Social Movements, Modern Empires Since 1820
Field of Study
Women and Social Movements
Content Type
Periodical issue
Contributor
Hubertine Auclert, 1848-1914
Date Published / Released
February 1884, 1884
Publisher
La Citoyenne
Series
La Citoyenne
Topic / Theme
Social Reform and Political Activism, Political and Human Rights, Political Parties and Other Male Dominated Organizations, Equal Rights for Women, Social and Cultural Rights, Arabs, French, Industrialization and Western Global Hegemony (1750–1914)
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La Citoyenne, No. 82, mars 1884
edited by Hubertine Auclert, 1848-1914, in La Citoyenne, No. 82, March, 1884 (Paris, Ile-de-France: La Citoyenne, 1884), 4 page(s)
La Citoyenne was a French feminist newspaper, founded, funded, and edited by Hubertine Auclert, with the primary aim of promoting women’s suffrage. Auclert, the leader of France’s fledgling suffrage movement from 1880 to her death in 1914, lived in Algeria from 1888-1892. This experience intensified and shaped...
edited by Hubertine Auclert, 1848-1914, in La Citoyenne, No. 82, March, 1884 (Paris, Ile-de-France: La Citoyenne, 1884), 4 page(s)
Description
La Citoyenne was a French feminist newspaper, founded, funded, and edited by Hubertine Auclert, with the primary aim of promoting women’s suffrage. Auclert, the leader of France’s fledgling suffrage movement from 1880 to her death in 1914, lived in Algeria from 1888-1892. This experience intensified and shaped her already existing interest in the colony. La Citoyenne, published from 1881-1891, was the first French feminist newspaper to addres...
La Citoyenne was a French feminist newspaper, founded, funded, and edited by Hubertine Auclert, with the primary aim of promoting women’s suffrage. Auclert, the leader of France’s fledgling suffrage movement from 1880 to her death in 1914, lived in Algeria from 1888-1892. This experience intensified and shaped her already existing interest in the colony. La Citoyenne, published from 1881-1891, was the first French feminist newspaper to address questions of empire. This issue includes the second of the four-part series, “La femme arabe” (“The Arab Woman”), which compared the lives of Algerian Muslim women to those of French women. This article argued that although Arab women’s lives were more physically constrained than French women, the Arab women had both greater legal rights and access to legal recourse than did women under France’s Napoleonic Code of Law. Another article includes the opening piece, “Le vote ou l’exonération de l’impot” (“The Vote or the Exemption from Taxation”), by Hubertine Auclert. It published a petition to the legislature, arguing that unless women had the right to vote, they should not have to pay taxes. The piece, “Divorce Comique” (“Divorce Comic”), criticized a Senate report involved in the ongoing debate regarding the re-establishment of legal divorce in France. In “La Reine de Madagascar” (“The Queen of Madagascar”), the pseudonymous author “Une Voyageuse” (“A Women Traveler”) explained how the newly-crowned Queen of Madagascar valorized education over militarism, countering European assumptions of her barbarism.
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Collection
Women and Social Movements, Modern Empires Since 1820
Field of Study
Women and Social Movements
Content Type
Periodical issue
Contributor
Hubertine Auclert, 1848-1914
Date Published / Released
March 1884, 1884
Publisher
La Citoyenne
Series
La Citoyenne
Topic / Theme
Peace, International Governance, and International Law, Political and Human Rights, Marital Status, Equal Rights for Women, Social and Cultural Rights, Arabs, French, Industrialization and Western Global Hegemony (1750–1914)
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La Citoyenne, No. 83, avril 1884
edited by Hubertine Auclert, 1848-1914, in La Citoyenne, No. 83, April, 1884 (Paris, Ile-de-France: La Citoyenne, 1884), 4 page(s)
La Citoyenne was a French feminist newspaper, founded, funded, and edited by Hubertine Auclert, with the primary aim of promoting women’s suffrage. Auclert, the leader of France’s fledgling suffrage movement from 1880 to her death in 1914, lived in Algeria from 1888-1892. This experience intensified and shaped...
edited by Hubertine Auclert, 1848-1914, in La Citoyenne, No. 83, April, 1884 (Paris, Ile-de-France: La Citoyenne, 1884), 4 page(s)
Description
La Citoyenne was a French feminist newspaper, founded, funded, and edited by Hubertine Auclert, with the primary aim of promoting women’s suffrage. Auclert, the leader of France’s fledgling suffrage movement from 1880 to her death in 1914, lived in Algeria from 1888-1892. This experience intensified and shaped her already existing interest in the colony. La Citoyenne, published from 1881-1891, was the first French feminist newspaper to addres...
La Citoyenne was a French feminist newspaper, founded, funded, and edited by Hubertine Auclert, with the primary aim of promoting women’s suffrage. Auclert, the leader of France’s fledgling suffrage movement from 1880 to her death in 1914, lived in Algeria from 1888-1892. This experience intensified and shaped her already existing interest in the colony. La Citoyenne, published from 1881-1891, was the first French feminist newspaper to address questions of empire. This issue includes the third in the four-part series, “La femme arabe” (“The Arab Woman”), which compared the lives of Algerian Muslim women to those of French women. This installment criticized marriage laws and practices in both Algeria and France, accusing France of hypocritically claiming to be more civilized than Algeria in these areas. In the article “Pour être belle” (“To Be Beautiful”), Hubertine Auclert countered a male journalist’s statement that the vote would make women ugly, by arguing that it would instead make them beautiful because it would emancipate them. The short announcement, “Les faux humanitaires” (“The False Humanitarians”), explained that the French Consul in Tangiers had taken steps to end slavery. The piece questioned why there was such concern for the slavery of Moroccan men and so little for French women’s slavery.
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Collection
Women and Social Movements, Modern Empires Since 1820
Field of Study
Women and Social Movements
Content Type
Periodical issue
Contributor
Hubertine Auclert, 1848-1914
Date Published / Released
April 1884, 1884
Publisher
La Citoyenne
Series
La Citoyenne
Topic / Theme
Peace, International Governance, and International Law, Social Reform and Political Activism, Political and Human Rights, Marital Status, Abolition of Slavery, Equal Rights for Women, Social and Cultural Rights, Arabs, French, Moroccans, Industrialization and Western Global Hegemony (1750–1914)
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La Citoyenne, No. 84, mai 1884
edited by Hubertine Auclert, 1848-1914, in La Citoyenne, No. 84, May, 1884 (Paris, Ile-de-France: La Citoyenne, 1884), 4 page(s)
La Citoyenne was a French feminist newspaper, founded, funded, and edited by Hubertine Auclert, with the primary aim of promoting women’s suffrage. Auclert, the leader of France’s fledgling suffrage movement from 1880 to her death in 1914, lived in Algeria from 1888-1892. This experience intensified and shaped...
edited by Hubertine Auclert, 1848-1914, in La Citoyenne, No. 84, May, 1884 (Paris, Ile-de-France: La Citoyenne, 1884), 4 page(s)
Description
La Citoyenne was a French feminist newspaper, founded, funded, and edited by Hubertine Auclert, with the primary aim of promoting women’s suffrage. Auclert, the leader of France’s fledgling suffrage movement from 1880 to her death in 1914, lived in Algeria from 1888-1892. This experience intensified and shaped her already existing interest in the colony. La Citoyenne, published from 1881-1891, was the first French feminist newspaper to addres...
La Citoyenne was a French feminist newspaper, founded, funded, and edited by Hubertine Auclert, with the primary aim of promoting women’s suffrage. Auclert, the leader of France’s fledgling suffrage movement from 1880 to her death in 1914, lived in Algeria from 1888-1892. This experience intensified and shaped her already existing interest in the colony. La Citoyenne, published from 1881-1891, was the first French feminist newspaper to address questions of empire. This issue includes the fourth and final part of the four-part series, “La femme arabe” (“The Arab Woman”), which compared the lives of Algerian Muslim women to those of French women. This article criticized the absolute separation of the sexes in Algerian culture and lamented the loss of the great ancient Arab culture, in which women played many prominent roles. The piece, “Le vote des femmes en Angleterre” (“Women’s Vote in England”), reported on the women’s suffrage struggle in England. The article, “Les Jésuites rouge” (“The Red Jesuits”), argued against an anarchist accusation that women’s suffragists were all pro-clerical.
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Collection
Women and Social Movements, Modern Empires Since 1820
Field of Study
Women and Social Movements
Content Type
Periodical issue
Contributor
Hubertine Auclert, 1848-1914
Date Published / Released
May 1884, 1884
Publisher
La Citoyenne
Series
La Citoyenne
Topic / Theme
Women and Religion, Political and Human Rights, Male Religious Authorities, Suffrage, Equal Rights for Women, Social and Cultural Rights, English, Arabs, French, Industrialization and Western Global Hegemony (1750–1914)
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La Citoyenne, No. 85, juin 1884
edited by Hubertine Auclert, 1848-1914, in La Citoyenne, No. 85, June, 1884 (Paris, Ile-de-France: La Citoyenne, 1884), 4 page(s)
La Citoyenne was a French feminist newspaper, founded, funded, and edited by Hubertine Auclert, with the primary aim of promoting women’s suffrage. Auclert, the leader of France’s fledgling suffrage movement from 1880 to her death in 1914, lived in Algeria from 1888-1892. This experience intensified and shaped...
edited by Hubertine Auclert, 1848-1914, in La Citoyenne, No. 85, June, 1884 (Paris, Ile-de-France: La Citoyenne, 1884), 4 page(s)
Description
La Citoyenne was a French feminist newspaper, founded, funded, and edited by Hubertine Auclert, with the primary aim of promoting women’s suffrage. Auclert, the leader of France’s fledgling suffrage movement from 1880 to her death in 1914, lived in Algeria from 1888-1892. This experience intensified and shaped her already existing interest in the colony. La Citoyenne, published from 1881-1891, was the first French feminist newspaper to addres...
La Citoyenne was a French feminist newspaper, founded, funded, and edited by Hubertine Auclert, with the primary aim of promoting women’s suffrage. Auclert, the leader of France’s fledgling suffrage movement from 1880 to her death in 1914, lived in Algeria from 1888-1892. This experience intensified and shaped her already existing interest in the colony. La Citoyenne, published from 1881-1891, was the first French feminist newspaper to address questions of empire. The opening article, “Le divorce est voté” (“Divorce Authorized”), announced the abrogation of the 1816 law abolishing divorce. In “Ce que ferait les femmes” (“What Would Women Do?”), Maria Martin (the future editor of La Citoyenne) reported that France’s military occupation of Tonkin had led to hostility from the local population. She contended that if women had been in charge, they would have used the same amount of money for economic development within the colony. In “Bal au Congo en honneur de M. de Brazza” (“Ball in the Congo in Honor of Mr. de Brazza”), the unsigned article described a village’s dance and celebration in honor of the arrival of the French imperialist explorer Pierre Savorgnan de Brazza.
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Collection
Women and Social Movements, Modern Empires Since 1820
Field of Study
Women and Social Movements
Content Type
Periodical issue
Contributor
Hubertine Auclert, 1848-1914
Date Published / Released
June 1884, 1884
Publisher
La Citoyenne
Series
La Citoyenne
Topic / Theme
Women, Colonization, Empire, and Post Coloniality, Peace, International Governance, and International Law, Political and Human Rights, Colonization and Empire, Marital Status, Equal Rights for Women, Social and Cultural Rights, French, Industrialization and Western Global Hegemony (1750–1914)
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La Citoyenne, No. 86, juillet 1884
edited by Hubertine Auclert, 1848-1914, in La Citoyenne, No. 86, July, 1884 (Paris, Ile-de-France: La Citoyenne, 1884), 4 page(s)
La Citoyenne was a French feminist newspaper, founded, funded, and edited by Hubertine Auclert, with the primary aim of promoting women’s suffrage. Auclert, the leader of France’s fledgling suffrage movement from 1880 to her death in 1914, lived in Algeria from 1888-1892. This experience intensified and shaped...
edited by Hubertine Auclert, 1848-1914, in La Citoyenne, No. 86, July, 1884 (Paris, Ile-de-France: La Citoyenne, 1884), 4 page(s)
Description
La Citoyenne was a French feminist newspaper, founded, funded, and edited by Hubertine Auclert, with the primary aim of promoting women’s suffrage. Auclert, the leader of France’s fledgling suffrage movement from 1880 to her death in 1914, lived in Algeria from 1888-1892. This experience intensified and shaped her already existing interest in the colony. La Citoyenne, published from 1881-1891, was the first French feminist newspaper to addres...
La Citoyenne was a French feminist newspaper, founded, funded, and edited by Hubertine Auclert, with the primary aim of promoting women’s suffrage. Auclert, the leader of France’s fledgling suffrage movement from 1880 to her death in 1914, lived in Algeria from 1888-1892. This experience intensified and shaped her already existing interest in the colony. La Citoyenne, published from 1881-1891, was the first French feminist newspaper to address questions of empire. This issue includes the article “La fête des femmes” (“The Women’s Festival”), by Hubertine Auclert. She supported the legislator Joseph Fabre’s proposal to create a national holiday honoring Joan of Arc (“Jeanne d’Arc”). She argued that “July 14 is a glorious anniversary for free men” (“le Juillet 14 est pour les hommes libre un glorieux anniversaire”), but for women it was a “cruel irony” (“ironie cruelle”). The article “L’Avenir du divorce” (“The Future of Divorce”) discussed the debates about the reintroduction of divorce into the Napoleonic Code of Law. The piece “Les femmes qui ont détruit la Bastille” (“The Women Who Destroyed the Bastille”) supported a geography professor’s call for a commemorative plaque honoring Mme. Legros, who participated in the July 14 events. The article suggested that along with Mme. Legros, the revolutionary women Reine Audru and Théroigne de Méricourt also be honored and included on the plaque.
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Collection
Women and Social Movements, Modern Empires Since 1820
Field of Study
Women and Social Movements
Content Type
Periodical issue
Contributor
Hubertine Auclert, 1848-1914
Date Published / Released
July 1884, 1884
Publisher
La Citoyenne
Series
La Citoyenne
Topic / Theme
Storming of the Bastille, July 14, 1789, Political and Human Rights, Family Rights, Equal Rights for Women, Social and Cultural Rights, French, Industrialization and Western Global Hegemony (1750–1914)
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La Citoyenne, No. 87, aout 1884
edited by Hubertine Auclert, 1848-1914, in La Citoyenne, No. 87, August, 1884 (Paris, Ile-de-France: La Citoyenne, 1884), 4 page(s)
La Citoyenne was a French feminist newspaper, founded, funded, and edited by Hubertine Auclert, with the primary aim of promoting women’s suffrage. Auclert, the leader of France’s fledgling suffrage movement from 1880 to her death in 1914, lived in Algeria from 1888-1892. This experience intensified and shaped...
edited by Hubertine Auclert, 1848-1914, in La Citoyenne, No. 87, August, 1884 (Paris, Ile-de-France: La Citoyenne, 1884), 4 page(s)
Description
La Citoyenne was a French feminist newspaper, founded, funded, and edited by Hubertine Auclert, with the primary aim of promoting women’s suffrage. Auclert, the leader of France’s fledgling suffrage movement from 1880 to her death in 1914, lived in Algeria from 1888-1892. This experience intensified and shaped her already existing interest in the colony. La Citoyenne, published from 1881-1891, was the first French feminist newspaper to addres...
La Citoyenne was a French feminist newspaper, founded, funded, and edited by Hubertine Auclert, with the primary aim of promoting women’s suffrage. Auclert, the leader of France’s fledgling suffrage movement from 1880 to her death in 1914, lived in Algeria from 1888-1892. This experience intensified and shaped her already existing interest in the colony. La Citoyenne, published from 1881-1891, was the first French feminist newspaper to address questions of empire. In this issue, Auclert takes on the topic of marriage and, in particular, the division of labor within traditional arrangements. This issue also features the full text of the 29 July 1884 revision to divorce law. A comparative piece examines marriage in China while another article investigates the threat of cholera. Abstract created by Jaime Wadowiec.
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Collection
Women and Social Movements, Modern Empires Since 1820
Field of Study
Women and Social Movements
Content Type
Periodical issue
Contributor
Hubertine Auclert, 1848-1914
Date Published / Released
August 1884, 1884
Publisher
La Citoyenne
Series
La Citoyenne
Topic / Theme
Women and Religion, Women and Sexuality, Birth Control, and Health, Political and Human Rights, Social Reform and Political Activism, Religious Prescriptions for Women, Primary Health Care, Suffrage, Social and Cultural Rights, Political Parties and Other Male Dominated Organizations, Chinese, French, Industrialization and Western Global Hegemony (1750–1914)
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