Léontine Zanta
Appearance
Léontine Zanta (14 February 1872 – 15 June 1942) was a French philosopher, feminist and novelist. One of the first two women to gain a doctorate in France, and the first to do so in philosophy, Zanta "was an intellectual celebrity in her day, active in journalism and in the feminist movement of the 1920s."[1]
Life
[edit]Zanta was born in Mâcon. Her doctoral thesis, defended in May 1914, was on the 16th-century revival of Stoicism. She never secured a position in higher education, and became a journalist and writer, publishing several novels.[1]
She maintained a correspondence with Teilhard de Chardin.[2]
In the late 1920s she received the Legion of Honour. Simone de Beauvoir remembered being inspired by her example as a woman philosopher.[1]
Works
[edit]- La renaissance du stoïcisme au XVIe siècle, 1914.
- (ed. with intro.) La traduction française du manuel d'Epictète d'André de Rivaudeau au XVIe siècle, 1914.
- Psychologie du féminisme, 1922
- La part du feu, 1927
- Sainte-Odile, 1931
References
[edit]- ^ a b c Toril Moi (2008). Simone De Beauvoir: The Making of an Intellectual Woman. Oxford University Press. pp. 71–72. ISBN 978-0-19-923871-2. Retrieved 25 January 2013.
- ^ Ursula King; Joseph Needham (2011). Teilhard De Chardin and Eastern Religions: Spirituality and Mysticism in an Evolutionary World. Paulist Press. p. 49. ISBN 978-0-8091-4704-5. Retrieved 25 January 2013.
Further reading
[edit]- Robert Garric, "Introduction", in Teilhard de Chardin, Letters to Léontine Zanta, trans. Bernard Wall. London: Collins, 1969. [ISBN missing]
- Henri Maleprade, Léontine Zanta, vertueuse aventurière du féminisme, Paris: Rive droite, 1997. [ISBN missing]
- Annabelle Bonnet, Léontine Zanta – Histoire oubliée de la première docteure française en philosophie, Préface de Geneviève Fraisse, Paris: L'Harmattan, Collection logiques sociales, 2021. [ISBN missing]
External links
[edit]- Works by Léontine Zanta at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)
Categories:
- 1872 births
- 1942 deaths
- People from Mâcon
- French journalists
- French feminists
- French women philosophers
- Scholars of feminist philosophy
- French women novelists
- 20th-century French philosophers
- 20th-century French women writers
- Knights of the Legion of Honour
- French scholars of ancient Greek philosophy
- 19th-century feminists