-
Louise Saumoneau (17
December 1875 – 23
February 1950) was a
French feminist who
later renounced feminism as
being irrelevant to the
class struggle. She...
- in a
condition to take her
place in a new society." In 1899,
Louise Saumoneau and Élisabeth
Renaud created the
Groupe Feministe Socialiste (GFS) following...
-
their maids.
There were two
socialist women,
Elizabeth Renaud and
Louise Saumoneau, who were not
willing to
simply accept Durand's lead. In the end, the...
- the
executive of this committee.
Albert Bourderon proposed and
Louise Saumoneau supported a
manifesto that said the
committee would function "until the...
- had
likewise condemned the conference, but a
French delegate,
Louise Saumoneau managed to
attend nevertheless.
There were four
delegates from the United...
- The
Groupe Feministe Socialiste was
founded in 1899 by
Louise Saumoneau and Élisabeth Renaud, both
working class socialists who
wished to
bring feminism...
- Jean Longuet, and
Loriot and
fellow socialists Charles Rappoport,
Louise Saumoneau and François
Mayoux took
control of the committee.
Merrheim withdrew to...
- her
first names, to
protect her husband's career. The
seamstress Louise Saumoneau, Élisabeth Renaud, and
others founded the
Feminist Socialist Group, which...
- France, 1871-1921:
socialist women's
groups from
Leonie Rouzade to
Louise Saumoneau.
University of Wisconsin--Madison. p. 3.
Retrieved 15
October 2010. Rustenholz...
-
members were
moderate bourgeois republicans. The
socialists led by
Louise Saumoneau and Élisabeth
Renaud were a tiny
minority on the left of this movement...