It is unfair to compare the views of Pisan and Plato against female characters to make wiser judgment from a women's point of view. For this reason, Pisang is a female and Plato is a man. Since women take thousands of years to achieve male equality, Pisan's perspective can be regarded as her age. Pisan's view looks more sensible, but you can see that Plato's view is also valid for his time and place. In Christine De Pisan's "The City of Women", she began to examine her role as a natural woman.
Although de Pisan's work is mainly written for the upper class (most lower grade women can not read and write), her writing helps to introduce the concept of equality and justice women in medieval France I will. De Pisan is living a relatively calm life, entering the Poissy Abbey (northwest of Paris) in 1418, including her last poem Le Ditid de Jeanne d'Arc (honor of Ark) (Joan of Arc), 1429. The runners are finished with the same color hue, and they are shaped like a zigzag flame at the edge. Wavy color pattern is characteristic of Bargello chip which is also known as "flame stitch" or "Florentine stitch" which is thought to be born in medieval Italy. According to Chicago, the design seems to eat a plate representing restriction of suffocation against women in the Renaissance period (Chicago, dinner, 86).
Christine de Pisan (Christine de Pisan) is a medieval writer and historian claiming women's equality. Her work is thought to be the earliest feminist work, such as poetry, novels, biography, autobiography, literature, politics, commentary on religion. De Pisan became the first woman to make a living in France in France, but it is also possible for Europeans. De Pisan grew up in Paris with a father named Thomas de Pisan, astrologer and secretary of the French Charles V world. Her education is not yet clear, but she can use various special libraries through the appointment of her father's court. In 1380, de Pisan married Picardie with noblemen Etienne du Castel. He was an exceptional husband at that time as he supported her education and writing efforts. When he died in 1390, de Pisan was only in his early twenties.