Reviewing Conduct Books as Feminist Rhetorical Devices for Agency Reforms
Reviewing Conduct Books as Feminist Rhetorical Devices for Agency Reforms
Peitho Volume 21 Issue 1 Fall/Winter 2018
Author(s): Florence Elizabeth Bacabac
Abstract: This essay extends the possibility that historical conduct books encourage women to work from within to enact agency reforms, particularly to survive the hostilities they faced in first-century China as well as exterminate misogynistic attacks in medieval Europe. With two translated works spanning across socio-historical milieus, Ban Zhao’s Lessons for Women (first-century China) and Christine de Pizan’s The Book of the Three Virtues (fifteenth-century France) reveal systematic approaches for ethical praxis that may have only been used to gain agentive powers for women through rhetorical education, contributing to the ontogenesis of pro-feminist movements.
Tags: agency reforms, conduct books for women, feminist rhetorical devices, symbolic identifications