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  1. Looking beyond women’s feminist thought in history.Geertje J. Bol - forthcoming - History of European Ideas.
    Historians of political thought have done important and insightful work on women’s history of political thought. This scholarship has proliferated since the mid to late twentieth century and has focused largely on the feminist aspects of their thought. Although this was at first a necessary and crucial correction of prior neglect, I argue that by now this has turned into an overcorrection. By turning to the early reception and rediscovery of two eighteenth-century English female political thinkers, Mary Astell (1666–1731) and (...)
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  • Protestantism and liberty: Catharine Macaulay’s politics of religion as a response to David Hume.Lucy Littlefield - forthcoming - Intellectual History Review:1-20.
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  • “There remains nothing to lose for the one who has lost liberty”: liberty and free will in Arcangela Tarabotti’s (1604–1652) radical criticism of the patriarchy. [REVIEW]Sabrina Ebbersmeyer - 2021 - Intellectual History Review 31 (1):7-26.
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  • Catharine Macaulay and the concept of “radical enlightenment”.Karen Green - 2021 - Intellectual History Review 31 (1):165-180.
    Margaret Jacob and Jonathan Israel have offered somewhat different accounts of what they call the ‘Radical Enlightenment’, that is those elements of enlightenment thought which resulted in the radical political upheavals of the late eighteenth century and the rise of democratic republicanism. Jonathan Israel, in particular, insists that the radical enlightenment was radical both in its secular rejection of all providentialist and teleological metaphysics, as well as radical in its democratic tendencies. This paper looks at the way in which Catharine (...)
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  • Where are the female radicals?Sabrina Ebbersmeyer & Gianni Paganini - 2021 - Intellectual History Review 31 (1):1-6.
    If one is interested in studying the role women played in radical circles and in the development of radical thought during the early modern period, one is confronted with the curious fact that ther...
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