The Tragedy of the Freelance Hustler: Hegel, Gender and Civil Society

Contemporary Political Theory 1 (3):329-347 (2002)
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Abstract

This paper explores the gendering of civil society by focusing on the moral campaigns against wet nursing and in favour of maternal feeding in the late 18th and early 19th centuries, drawing attention to the overlap between the family and market society. It argues that the organization of sexual difference is central to the social world and to the idea of civil society in Hegel's Philosophy of Right. Men enjoyed the benefits of ethical incorporation into a rich version of civil society and withheld worth from women's participation in the market. Women who immersed themselves in the world of exchange were stigmatized as mercenaries and freelance hustlers, so that they could not achieve ethical incorporation except as natural mothers in the nether world of the family

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References found in this work

Hegel’s Ethical Thought.Allen W. Wood - 1990 - New York: Cambridge University Press.
Hegel’s Ethics of Recognition.Robert R. Williams - 1997 - University of California Press.
Hegel’s Social Philosophy: The Project of Reconciliation.Michael O. Hardimon - 1994 - New York, NY, USA: Cambridge University Press.
A vindication of the rights of woman.Mary Wollstonecraft - 2007 - In Elizabeth Schmidt Radcliffe, Richard McCarty, Fritz Allhoff & Anand Vaidya (eds.), Late modern philosophy: essential readings with commentary. Oxford: Wiley-Blackwell.
The Meaning of Conservatism.Roger Scruton - 2014 - St. Augustine's Press.

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