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This book investigates how women shaped the course of revolutions that routinely erase their names, tracing the lives of women who helped draft manifestos, march on palaces, and organize the streets from the French Revolution to the Russian upheavals of 1905 and 1917. It follows salon‑hostesses, pamphleteers, rioters, and Bolshevik women cadres who turned bread riots into political insurrections, transforming everyday grievances into the language of rights, sovereignty, and class war.
Drawing on police files, prison memoirs, and party archives, the book reconstructs the mechanics of their participation: how women in Paris led the Women's March on Versailles, forcing the monarchy back to the capital; how radical women in Russia joined socialist circles, smuggled propaganda, and manned strikes and uprisings while the state punished them as both "subversives" and "unwomanly"; and how figures like Olympe de Gouges, Sophie de Condorcet, Inessa Armand, and Alexandra Kollontai laid ideological and organizational groundwork that later male‑centric histories treated as footnotes. It also examines how revolutionary governments and counter‑revolutionary forces alike instrumentalized women's bodies and domestic roles, alternately praising them as "heroines of the street" and then silencing them when their demands for gender equality threatened the new order.