La querelle des femmes": En arkipelagisk historia

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Standard

La querelle des femmes" : En arkipelagisk historia. / Amundsen Bergström, Matilda.

I: Lychnos: An annual for history of ideas and science, 2016, s. 59-80.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Amundsen Bergström, M 2016, 'La querelle des femmes": En arkipelagisk historia', Lychnos: An annual for history of ideas and science, s. 59-80. <https://tidskriftenlychnos.se/article/view/20419/18351>

APA

Amundsen Bergström, M. (2016). La querelle des femmes": En arkipelagisk historia. Lychnos: An annual for history of ideas and science, 59-80. https://tidskriftenlychnos.se/article/view/20419/18351

Vancouver

Amundsen Bergström M. La querelle des femmes": En arkipelagisk historia. Lychnos: An annual for history of ideas and science. 2016;59-80.

Author

Amundsen Bergström, Matilda. / La querelle des femmes" : En arkipelagisk historia. I: Lychnos: An annual for history of ideas and science. 2016 ; s. 59-80.

Bibtex

@article{dfc1a4138f214ef9974dee205fcaf93c,
title = "La querelle des femmes{"}: En arkipelagisk historia",
abstract = "In the article ”Revisiter la querelle des femmes. Mais de quoi parle-t-on?” the literary historian {\'E}liane Viennot posed a question that has troubled scholars of European women{\textquoteright}s history: what do we mean by the term la querelle des femmes? Even though la querelle des femmes is often evoked as an important context for understanding women{\textquoteright}s writing in the Renaissance and Early modern periods, the phenomenon seems strikingly difficult to define more exactly. This has led to much terminological debate and confusion, with some scholars outright questioning the usability of the term. In this article, I attempt to bring some clarity to the debate by discussing four possible approaches to la querelle des femmes: thematic, literary, political, and historical. These have all been used by current research. Lastly, I will argue for the usability of the term by suggesting a fifth approach, drawing on the philosopher {\'E}douard Glissant{\textquoteright}s and the historian Maria Bucur{\textquoteright}s respective use of an archipelagic metaphor. Throughout this article, modern research is connected to texts from the 15th, 16th and 17th centuries, mainly from France, England, and Italy.",
keywords = "Det Humanistiske Fakultet, gender history, Early modern Europe, intellectual history",
author = "{Amundsen Bergstr{\"o}m}, Matilda",
year = "2016",
language = "Svensk",
pages = "59--80",
journal = "Lychnos : Lardomshistoriska samfundets arsbok = annual of the Swedish History of Science Society",
issn = "0076-1648",
publisher = "Swedish Science Press",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - La querelle des femmes"

T2 - En arkipelagisk historia

AU - Amundsen Bergström, Matilda

PY - 2016

Y1 - 2016

N2 - In the article ”Revisiter la querelle des femmes. Mais de quoi parle-t-on?” the literary historian Éliane Viennot posed a question that has troubled scholars of European women’s history: what do we mean by the term la querelle des femmes? Even though la querelle des femmes is often evoked as an important context for understanding women’s writing in the Renaissance and Early modern periods, the phenomenon seems strikingly difficult to define more exactly. This has led to much terminological debate and confusion, with some scholars outright questioning the usability of the term. In this article, I attempt to bring some clarity to the debate by discussing four possible approaches to la querelle des femmes: thematic, literary, political, and historical. These have all been used by current research. Lastly, I will argue for the usability of the term by suggesting a fifth approach, drawing on the philosopher Édouard Glissant’s and the historian Maria Bucur’s respective use of an archipelagic metaphor. Throughout this article, modern research is connected to texts from the 15th, 16th and 17th centuries, mainly from France, England, and Italy.

AB - In the article ”Revisiter la querelle des femmes. Mais de quoi parle-t-on?” the literary historian Éliane Viennot posed a question that has troubled scholars of European women’s history: what do we mean by the term la querelle des femmes? Even though la querelle des femmes is often evoked as an important context for understanding women’s writing in the Renaissance and Early modern periods, the phenomenon seems strikingly difficult to define more exactly. This has led to much terminological debate and confusion, with some scholars outright questioning the usability of the term. In this article, I attempt to bring some clarity to the debate by discussing four possible approaches to la querelle des femmes: thematic, literary, political, and historical. These have all been used by current research. Lastly, I will argue for the usability of the term by suggesting a fifth approach, drawing on the philosopher Édouard Glissant’s and the historian Maria Bucur’s respective use of an archipelagic metaphor. Throughout this article, modern research is connected to texts from the 15th, 16th and 17th centuries, mainly from France, England, and Italy.

KW - Det Humanistiske Fakultet

KW - gender history

KW - Early modern Europe

KW - intellectual history

M3 - Tidsskriftartikel

SP - 59

EP - 80

JO - Lychnos : Lardomshistoriska samfundets arsbok = annual of the Swedish History of Science Society

JF - Lychnos : Lardomshistoriska samfundets arsbok = annual of the Swedish History of Science Society

SN - 0076-1648

ER -

ID: 249904238