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The Voyages of Lord Seaton to the Seven Planets

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The Voyages of Lord Seaton to the Seven Planets
AuthorMarie-Anne de Roumier-Robert
LanguageFrench
GenreScience fiction
Publication date
1765
Publication placeFrance

The Voyages of Lord Seaton to the Seven Planets is a 1765 romantic utopian novel by Marie-Anne de Roumier-Robert. In the form of travel literature through the solar system, this novel addresses innovative feminist themes for the time.[1]

Summary

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Marie-Anne Robert describes a journey made by a heroine, Monime, guided by a genius named Zachiel. This initiatory journey which takes her into space to visit seven planets is supposed to teach her the skills she needs for her royal destiny.[2][3]

Analysis

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The novel is a bildungsroman in which the heroine tours the solar system. She discovers people who demonstrate different failings of humanity, such as frivolity, a taste for war, a taste for money or the cult of science. Her journey takes her to Saturn where she discovers an ideal, hardworking and caring society.[4]

Guided by feminist ideas, Marie-Anne Robert deplores female ignorance, at the origin of the submission of women in society. She describes an egalitarian society established on Venus, where the education of women allowed them to occupy all public positions.[3]

At the end of her journey, Monime, grown by her experience and her wisdom, decides to return to Earth to recover her father's throne. Marie-Anne Robert thus demonstrates that women are completely equal to men in their capacity to achieve great deeds through their will and courage, contrary to the beliefs of contemporary thinkers. The emancipation of women no longer becomes an obscure and guilt-inducing idea, but rather a force which must lead to a utopian society.[3]

References

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  1. ^ "French women writers: Marie-Anne de Roumier-Robert (1705-1771)". Daily Kos. Retrieved 2024-04-03.
  2. ^ Grieder, Josephine (Winter 1989–1990). "Kingdoms of Women in French Fiction of the 1780s". Eighteenth-Century Studies. 23 (2): 140–156. doi:10.2307/2738735. JSTOR 2738735.
  3. ^ a b c "Lumières féminines et liberté de parole : Marie-Anne de Roumier-Robert (1705-1771), voyageuse immobile". CRLV / Astrolabe (in French). Retrieved 2024-04-03.
  4. ^ Costes, Guy; Altairac, Joseph; Ethuin, Philippe; Mura, Philippe (2018). Rétrofictions: encyclopédie de la conjecture romanesque rationnelle francophone, de Rabelais à Barjavel 1532-1951. Interface. Amiens, France: Encrage. ISBN 978-2-251-44851-0. OCLC 1056247996.

Further reading

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