This collection considers
one of the most important
figures of the modern canon
of political philosophy,
John Locke. A physician
by training and profession,
Locke not only wrote one
of the most important
and well-known treatises
of the modern canon, but
also made important contributions
in the areas of
seventeenth-century law
and public policy, epistemology,
philosophy of language, religion, and economics.
There has been a long-standing debate in feminist scholarship
on Locke as to whether this early founder of modern liberal
thought was a strong feminist or whether he ushered in a
new, and uniquely modern, form of sexism. The essays grapple
with this controversy but also move beyond it to the meaning
of gender, the status of femininity and masculinity, and how
these affect Locke’s construction of the state and law.
The volume opens with three of the early “classic” feminist
essays on Locke and follows them with reflective essays by
their original authors that engage Locke with issues of globalization
and international justice. Other essays examine
Locke’s midwifery notes, his treatise on education, his writings
on Christianity, his contributions to poor-law policy,
his economic writings, and his Essay Concerning Human
Understanding. In addition to essays by leading feminist
theorists, the volume also includes essays by some leading
Locke scholars for whom gender is not normally a primary
focus, so that the volume should speak to a wide range of
scholarly interests and concerns.
Besides the editors, the contributors are Teresa Brennan,
Melissa Butler, Terrell Carver, Carole Pateman, Carol Pech,
Gordon Schochet, Mary Lyndon Shanley, Jeremy Waldron,
Joanne Wright, and Linda Zerilli. |
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