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Women in the Great European Revolutions: Gender, Culture, Class, and the State explores and compares the roles, mentalities, and destinies of elitist and working-class women in Europe's most dramatic revolutions: England's "Puritan Revolution" of 1640-1660, France's 1789 Revolution, and Russia's 1917 Revolution.
By providing one of the most detailed analyses to date of how feminist historians, sociologists,
and specialists theorize gender, sexuality, and patriarchy, the author draws connections to current
debate over the causation of sociopolitical revolutions. This book briefly outlines the stage-by-stage
progression of events in the English, French, and Russian Revolutions.