Description
Book SynopsisThe Labor of the Mind plumbs the Enlightenment's social and cultural logic of conceiving the mind as manly; considers the textual representations of the manly mind; and examines the ways in which it was subverted or at least subtly questioned.
Trade Review"This excellent new book all but overflows with unusually erudite and insightful analysis of an impressive array of interesting and important figures, notably Poullain de la Barre, Nicolas Malebranche, the marquise de Lambert, the earl of Shaftesbury, David Hume, Antoine-Léonard Thomas, Suzanne Necker, Denis Diderot, and Louise d'Épinay . . .
The Labor of the Mind will take its place as an indispensable work of seventeenth- and eighteenth-centuryWestern European intellectual history." *
Journal of Modern History *
"A thoughtful historicist study of how men and a few women in seventeenth and eighteenth-century France, England, and Scotland construed the relationship between intelligence, gender, and work,
The Labor of the Mind is a welcome example of scholarship that brings a gender-studies perspective to the often male-centric field of intellectual history . . . La Vopa's book makes a major contribution to the ongoing debate in eighteenth-century French studies surrounding the relative roles of gender, social status, and intellectual seriousness in salon culture." *
Modern Philology *
"[A]n impressive tour de force - the result of many years of research and reflection . . . [A] rich, subtle, and refined work, full of deep historical wisdom but devoid of any excessive display of erudition; sophisticated and precise in its analysis, clear and elegant in its writing; utterly readable and enjoyable. It is a book from which we historians of every branch of the discipline will learn precious lessons - about the past and about our craft." *
Early Modern Women *
"
The Labor of the Mind is the most subtle and innovative study of Enlightenment thought in decades. Taking conversations rather than printed texts as his starting point, and reaching back deeply into the seventeenth century, Anthony J. La Vopa shows how male-female friendships within an aristocratic culture produced both intellectual dynamism and anxieties about the feminization of the mind. La Vopa interweaves the ideas and conversational practices of such prominent writers as David Hume and Denis Diderot with those of lesser-known figures such as Poullain de la Barre and Suzanne Necker, offering fascinating insights about these thinkers as both human beings and as makers of our modern understandings of femininity and manliness." * Suzanne Marchard, Louisiana State University *
"
The Labor of the Mind is a terrific book and a magisterial contribution to Enlightenment studies, to intellectual history, and especially to gender studies. Labor, as the practice of intellectual work, and gender serve as two prongs of incisive analysis running through the book. By grounding texts and ideas in the lives and experiences of the men and women who wrote them, Anthony J. La Vopa has breathed new life into the intellectual history of the eighteenth century." * Mary Terrall, University of California, Los Angeles *
Table of ContentsA Note on Translations
Introduction
Chapter 1. The Social Aesthetic of Play in Seventeenth-Century France
—Aissance and Labor
—The Intelligence of Women
Chapter 2. Poullain de la Barre: Feminism, Radical and Polite
—Conversion
—The Mind Has No Sex
—Cartesianism for Ladies
Chapter 3. Malebranche and the Bel Esprit
—Montaigne's Sin of Style
—The Cartesian Augustinian
—Original Sin and the Labor of Attention
—The Bel Esprit
—The Author Despite Himself
Chapter 4. Love, Gallantry, and Friendship
—The Loves and Friendships of Saint-Évremond
—The Dissent of Mme de Lambert
Chapter 5. Shaftesbury's Quest for Fraternity
—The Turn to Stoicism
—The French Menace
—Friendship
— Critics, Markets, and Labor
—The Moralists
Chapter 6. The Labors of David Hume
—Writing the Treatise
—The Essayist
—The Vicissitudes of Taste
—The Philosopher and the Countess
Chapter 7. Genius and the Social: Antoine-Léonard Thomas and Suzanne Curchod Necker
—Friends
—Amphibians
—The Labor of Genius
—Gallantry Corrupted
Chapter 8. Minds Not Meeting: Denis Diderot and Louise d'Épinay
—Diderot's Paternal Voice
—Diderot's Clinical Voice
—Mme d'Épinay's Feminism
Conclusion
Notes
Index
Acknowledgments