Begin your walking tour at the Panthéon, where you’ll learn about the stark gender imbalance in who is commemorated : only seven women rest among eighty-three men. Figures such as Marie Curie, Simone Veil, Joséphine Baker, and Mélinée Manouchian reveal the different ways women have been recognised, sometimes for their achievements, sometimes through their relationships to men and illustrate the challenges of memory, representation, and recognition.
Continue through Parisian streets, visiting Rue Pierre et Marie Curie and the Radium Institute, showing how women like Marie Curie and her assistants advanced science despite societal obstacles. At the Sorbonne, learn how women fought for access to higher education, overcoming institutional barriers and cultural prejudice to claim spaces historically reserved for men.
The Jardin du Luxembourg provides a visual exploration of representation through statues, contrasting the visibility of queens and illustrious women with the overwhelming dominance of male figures in public space.
In Saint-Germain-des-Prés, the tour highlights the literary and intellectual contributions of women in cafés such as Café de Flore and Les Deux Magots, spaces traditionally celebrated for their male patrons. Figures like Simone de Beauvoir and George Sand demonstrate how women claimed intellectual authority and influenced ideas despite being marginalized in memory.
Throughout the walk, see Paris not just through its monuments, but through its silences, questioning which figures are celebrated, which are forgotten, and how public spaces reflect long-standing social hierarchies. By the end of the tour, gain a richer understanding of how women’s contributions have shaped the city and the ongoing effort to recognise and restore their memory