Jenny d'Héricourt
Jenny d'Héricourt (9 September 1809 – 12 January 1875) was a French feminist activist, writer, and a physician-midwife.
Quotes
edit- In marriage, woman is a serf.
In public instruction, she is sacrificed.
In labor, she is made inferior.
Civilly, she is a minor.
Politically, she has no existence.
She is the equal of man only when punishment and the payment of taxes are in question.
I claim the rights of woman, because it is time to make the nineteenth century ashamed of its culpable denial of justice to half the human species;
Because the state of inferiority in which we are held corrupts morals, dissolves society, deteriorates and enfeebles the race;
Because the progress of enlightenment, in which woman participates, has transformed her in social power, and because this new power produces evil in default of the good which it is not permitted to do;
Because the time for according reforms has come, since women are protesting against the order which oppresses them; some by disdain of laws and prejudices; others by taking possession of contested positions, and by organizing themselves into societies to claim their share of human rights, as is done in America;
Lastly, because it seems to me useful to reply, no longer with sentimentality, but with vigor, to those men who, terrified by the emancipating movement, call to their aid false science to prove that woman is outside the pale of right; and carry indecorum and the opposite of courage, even to insult, even to the most revolting outrages.- A Woman's Philosophy of Woman; or Woman Affranchised (New York, 1864), Preface