Clothed In Excellence: Why Plato's Republic Is A Feminist Text By Its Own Lights

Abstract

In this project I set out to establish that Plato's Republic is a feminist text by its own lights in isolation from the rest of his corpus as well as his historically dubious personal beliefs as a philosopher. I employ a dualistic picture of feminist theory's two central premises, which is inspired by Mary Wollstonecraft's Vindication. My demonstration includes an initial portrayal of Book V's qualification of female nature as human nature as well as a sketch of its logical structure. I answer three of the most pressing objections to my thesis, and conclude with one of my favorite quotes in the entire dialogue. Highlights of this paper include my argument by pragmatics which serves as explanation for Socrates' use of proprietary language, as well as my general analysis of Book V. Socrates is pushing some historical boundaries in this one broh. AESTHETIC WARNING: There is an annoying and irremovable space on the top of page 17. I labored for an hour and a half trying to fix it. I have exhaled deeply and set it free (for now?).

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Why women cannot rule: Sexism in Plato scholarship.Natalie Harris Bluestone - 1988 - Philosophy of the Social Sciences 18 (1):41-60.

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