Welcome to the LitCharts study guide on Jean-Jacques Rousseau's The Social Contract. Created by the original team behind SparkNotes, LitCharts are the world's best literature guides.
The Social Contract: Introduction
The Social Contract: Plot Summary
The Social Contract: Detailed Summary & Analysis
The Social Contract: Themes
The Social Contract: Quotes
The Social Contract: Characters
The Social Contract: Terms
The Social Contract: Symbols
The Social Contract: Theme Wheel
Brief Biography of Jean-Jacques Rousseau
Historical Context of The Social Contract
Other Books Related to The Social Contract
- Full Title: On the Social Contract; or, Principles of Political Rights
- When Written: 1756-1760
- Where Written: Paris and Montmorency, France
- When Published: 1762
- Literary Period: The Enlightenment
- Genre: Political Philosophy; Enlightenment
- Point of View: Third-person
Extra Credit for The Social Contract
Hometown Pride? Rousseau famously signed many of his works, including The Social Contract, as “J.J. Rousseau, Citizen of Geneva,” and in multiple places he praises the Genevan city-state as an ideal political community because it supposedly allows all citizens to participate in lawmaking. However, Rousseau was writing primarily about Geneva’s original political order when it was founded in the 1500s, and so his civic pride was also a way of pointing out the corruption and inadequacy of Geneva’s government at the time, which was elitist and aristocratic. Geneva’s government was so offended by Rousseau’s book that it banned and publicly burned it, then banned him from ever entering the city. (It so happens that the his father was also banned from Geneva, although for very different reasons.) Today, however, Rousseau is a celebrated figure in Geneva, which has named streets, hotels, schools, and even an island after him.