La morale sexuelle, la famille et les droits reproductifs vus par le réseau transnational des femmes communistes dans les années 1920

The international communist women’s movement founded in 1920 fought for the full political, economic and social equality between men and women which was to be achieved through the revolutionary transformation of the capitalist system. It also aspired to create a society based on a new morality. The...

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Main Author: Daria Dyakonova
Format: Article
Language:fra
Published: Association Paul Langevin 2021-09-01
Series:Cahiers d’histoire.
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.openedition.org/chrhc/16774
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spelling doaj-6299dbe62dd443a786c38f902a0ec5f82021-09-21T12:23:16ZfraAssociation Paul LangevinCahiers d’histoire. 1271-66692102-59162021-09-01150233710.4000/chrhc.16774La morale sexuelle, la famille et les droits reproductifs vus par le réseau transnational des femmes communistes dans les années 1920Daria DyakonovaThe international communist women’s movement founded in 1920 fought for the full political, economic and social equality between men and women which was to be achieved through the revolutionary transformation of the capitalist system. It also aspired to create a society based on a new morality. The bourgeois family had to give way to a proletarian unit where two individuals would be free and independent. The movement urged to grant women freedom of choice in matters of reproduction where moral judgment would no longer play a primary role. Prostitution was also seen as a social phenomenon linked to the economic inequality of sexes present in a capitalist system and not as a sin. In contrast, the discourse on sexual freedom was quite complex. Supported by the youth of the Soviet Komsomol, sexual liberation was, however, viewed with caution (and sometimes suspicion) by some communist women.http://journals.openedition.org/chrhc/16774international communist women’s movementfamilymaternityabortionprostitutionsexual morality
collection DOAJ
language fra
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Daria Dyakonova
spellingShingle Daria Dyakonova
La morale sexuelle, la famille et les droits reproductifs vus par le réseau transnational des femmes communistes dans les années 1920
Cahiers d’histoire.
international communist women’s movement
family
maternity
abortion
prostitution
sexual morality
author_facet Daria Dyakonova
author_sort Daria Dyakonova
title La morale sexuelle, la famille et les droits reproductifs vus par le réseau transnational des femmes communistes dans les années 1920
title_short La morale sexuelle, la famille et les droits reproductifs vus par le réseau transnational des femmes communistes dans les années 1920
title_full La morale sexuelle, la famille et les droits reproductifs vus par le réseau transnational des femmes communistes dans les années 1920
title_fullStr La morale sexuelle, la famille et les droits reproductifs vus par le réseau transnational des femmes communistes dans les années 1920
title_full_unstemmed La morale sexuelle, la famille et les droits reproductifs vus par le réseau transnational des femmes communistes dans les années 1920
title_sort la morale sexuelle, la famille et les droits reproductifs vus par le réseau transnational des femmes communistes dans les années 1920
publisher Association Paul Langevin
series Cahiers d’histoire.
issn 1271-6669
2102-5916
publishDate 2021-09-01
description The international communist women’s movement founded in 1920 fought for the full political, economic and social equality between men and women which was to be achieved through the revolutionary transformation of the capitalist system. It also aspired to create a society based on a new morality. The bourgeois family had to give way to a proletarian unit where two individuals would be free and independent. The movement urged to grant women freedom of choice in matters of reproduction where moral judgment would no longer play a primary role. Prostitution was also seen as a social phenomenon linked to the economic inequality of sexes present in a capitalist system and not as a sin. In contrast, the discourse on sexual freedom was quite complex. Supported by the youth of the Soviet Komsomol, sexual liberation was, however, viewed with caution (and sometimes suspicion) by some communist women.
topic international communist women’s movement
family
maternity
abortion
prostitution
sexual morality
url http://journals.openedition.org/chrhc/16774
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