TY - JOUR
T1 - The genders of citizenship
AU - Leonard, Stephen T.
AU - Tronto, Joan C.
PY - 2007/2/1
Y1 - 2007/2/1
N2 - One important legacy of republicanism is the ideal of good citizenship; a related legacy of republicanism is the equation of citizenship and masculinity. These legacies are at once strange and familiar: today, masculinity and citizenship are often conceptualized as discrete and distinctive identities, and some critics, most notably feminists, suggest that in modern democracies good citizenship and masculinity may even be contradictory ideals. The source of these conceptual paradoxes is the transformation of gender and civic discourse in the early modern period, particularly the "long eighteenth century." Understanding the implications of these changes helps us better grasp both the relationship of gender and citizenship today, and how a more effectively engaged and meaningfully egalitarian form of democratic citizenship, for men and women, might be realized.
AB - One important legacy of republicanism is the ideal of good citizenship; a related legacy of republicanism is the equation of citizenship and masculinity. These legacies are at once strange and familiar: today, masculinity and citizenship are often conceptualized as discrete and distinctive identities, and some critics, most notably feminists, suggest that in modern democracies good citizenship and masculinity may even be contradictory ideals. The source of these conceptual paradoxes is the transformation of gender and civic discourse in the early modern period, particularly the "long eighteenth century." Understanding the implications of these changes helps us better grasp both the relationship of gender and citizenship today, and how a more effectively engaged and meaningfully egalitarian form of democratic citizenship, for men and women, might be realized.
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U2 - 10.1017/S0003055407070207
DO - 10.1017/S0003055407070207
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:33947547237
SN - 0003-0554
VL - 101
SP - 33
EP - 46
JO - American Political Science Review
JF - American Political Science Review
IS - 1
ER -