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October 1999

Women & politics: Madame Roland

by Renee Winegarten

I should need a Madame Roland as my reader.
—Stendhal

That unpunished vice, reading.
—Valéry Larbaud

If anyone helps to overturn conventional notions about the role of women in politics in eighteenth-century France it is Marie-Jeanne (Manon) Phlipon, later Mme Roland (1754–1793). It was not simply the French Revolution of 1789 that inspired her concern with history, society, and the art of government. That interest was of long standing in a deeply studious young woman who loved reading, even works by the most difficult thinkers, and who read widely for self-instruction and self-knowledge as well as pleasure. Much cherished by her parents as the sole survivor of seven children, she was endowed with a strong sense of her own worth and capabilities.

In 1776, Manon, daughter of a well-established master engraver, tried to call on the celebrated recluse, Jean-Jacques Rousseau. She failed to get past Th&e ...

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Renee Winegarten writes regularly about French culture for The New Criterion and is the author of Accursed Politics: Some French Women Writers and Political Life (Ivan
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This article originally appeared in The New Criterion, Volume 18 October 1999, on page 27
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