Terrell Carver
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Rousseau
Fantasising men
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Rousseau is probably the most gender-conscious of political theorists, and the most conscious of sexual difference and sexuality. This chapter examines some of Rousseau's political theory for what it has to say about 'man', that is 'public man'. It explores him as the political theorist with the most extreme view of gender rooted in sexual difference between men and women, namely that this is both physical/natural and yet secured in society through education and politics. The chapter analyses a film that crosses the final frontier of sexual difference: male pregnancy and childbirth. It argues that Rousseau is just as guilty as other state-of-nature theorists in projecting 'civilised norms' onto the human animal. Rousseau's vision of 'man' in his earliest state is profoundly andromorphic, masculinised, and homosocial, because it expresses and reinforces persistent hunter/warrior fantasies about men that are generative of, and deployed in, contemporary armed conflict.

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