History, asked by bravimabilla, 8 months ago

What is salon? Comment on the role by salons, coffee house, books and newspapers in French Revolution.

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Answered by itzcutiepie777
4

Answer:

The French salon, a product of The Enlightenment in the early 18th century, was a key institution in which women played a central role. Salons provided a place for women and men to congregate for intellectual discourse.

A main purpose of the salons of Paris for the salonnières during the Enlightenment was to "satisfy the self-determined educational needs of the women who started them" (Goodman, 42). For the salonnières, the salon was a socially acceptable substitute for the formal education denied to them

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Answered by AspiringWriter1107
4

Answer:

A) A salon is a gathering of people held by of an inspiring host. During the gathering they amuse one another and increase their knowledge through conversation.  

1) It was through books and newspapers that people spread their ideas and exposed the evil that existed in their system and infused in people the idea of liberty, equality and fraternity.

2) In the book The Spirit of the Laws, Montesquieu proposed a division of power within the government between the legislative, the executive and the judiciary.

3) In his Two Treatises of Government, Locke sought to refute the doctrine of the divine and absolute right of the monarch.

4) Rousseau carried the idea forward, proposing a form of government based on a social contract between people and their representatives. Rousseau gave the people an idea of democracy from his book The Social Contract.  

5) The ideas of these philosophers were discussed intensively in salons and coffee-houses and spread among people through books and newspapers. These were frequently read aloud in groups for the benefit of those who could not read and write.

6) Thus, we can say that salons, coffee houses, books and newspapers played an important role in the French Revolution.

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