Exercises in Women's Intellectual Sociability in the Eighteenth Century: The Fair Intellectual Club

History of European Ideas 41 (3):375-386 (2015)
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Abstract

SummaryThe Fair Intellectual Club was the earliest female intellectual sociability on record in Britain in the eighteenth century. A study of the club provides insights into the motivations for founding such a society. The reading list of the club contains some twenty pamphlets on a variety of subjects including the education of both sexes, friendship and moral issues. The particular question in mind while assessing these materials will be, as far as this club is concerned, what kind of philosophical understanding of sociability inspired these ladies. The Fair Intellectual Club also provides a platform for discussion of questions about the identity, the responsibility, and the gender of learned persons, in addition to their role as active agents in the production of knowledge in the eighteenth century.

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The Philosophical Society of Edinburgh 1737–1747.Roger L. Emerson - 1979 - British Journal for the History of Science 12 (2):154-191.

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