Terrell Carver
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Locke
Overtly and covertly gendered narratives of political society
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This chapter uses the gender lens to explore narratives in Locke's Two Treatises of Government that have become foundational for the documents and practices of liberal democracy. It reviews what has previously been conceptualised in commentary as the family and household, parental and filial obligations, the 'sexual contract', patriarchy, the public/private 'split' and gender-neutral concepts of 'man'. The overtly gendered narrative about men that occurs in Locke's Two Treatises 'genders' power-relations in political society. The chapter draws out what he has to say about rulership, householdership, parenthood and conjugal relations by showing that there are effectively three kinds of dominant masculinities at issue. One is related to the rational/bureaucratic masculinity of modern commerce, which he endorsed, and another is related to concepts of masculine tenderness and solicitude. The third is related to the warrior mode of Filmerian absolutism, conquest and tyranny, to which he was deeply opposed.

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