TITLE:
Women in the French Revolution
AUTHORS:
Chang Ge
KEYWORDS:
Gender Equality, French Revolution, Women’s Activism
JOURNAL NAME:
Open Journal of Social Sciences,
Vol.13 No.11,
November
5,
2025
ABSTRACT: This paper examines the role of women in shaping discourses of gender equality during the French Revolution (1789-1794), situating their activism within the intellectual framework of the Enlightenment. While Enlightenment philosophers often reinforced restrictive gender norms, new currents of thought about sexual equality inspired female activists to challenge entrenched hierarchies. Women engaged in food riots, organized political clubs such as the Society of Revolutionary Republican Women, and produced groundbreaking works, including Olympe de Gouges’ Declaration of the Rights of Woman and the Female Citizen. These efforts highlighted the paradox of the Revolution: while women’s clubs were banned and leading activists executed, their participation forced French society to confront women’s capacity for civic engagement. Though legislative recognition of women’s rights was suppressed, reforms in family law such as access to divorce and equal inheritance granted women new personal and economic autonomy. More broadly, women’s unprecedented activism disrupted traditional gender expectations, compelling both men and women to reconsider women’s social roles. The Revolution ultimately failed to achieve full gender equality, yet women’s engagement left a lasting legacy by inspiring future generations to associate their struggle with universal ideals of liberty and justice. This paper underscores how women’s activism reframed societal perceptions and contributed to the evolution of modern gender discourse.