Mary Wollstonecraft: A Vindication of the Rights of Women

 
College Research | Essays | British History |  Wolstonecraft, Mary

Mary Wollstonecraft - Womens Rights

Overview by Leah King

Mary Wollstonecraft is held as being the first modern feminist. She was born in 1759 to a gentry farmer and an unloving mother and is said to have began her protests at an early age by protecting her mother from an abusive father and resenting her brother's favored position. She worked as a governess for a number of years however she chose to make an unconventional career as an editor and a journalist. In 1786 she wrote the Thoughts on the Education of Daughters and in 1790 published A Vindication of the Rights of Man as a response to the goals brought fourth by the French revolution. However, Wollstonecraft owes much of her fame to her feminist social study A Vindication of the Rights of Women. In this work Wollstonecraft addressed the legal, economic and educational disabilities of women. Ultimately she argues that the equal rights that are applied to men should be extended to include women. Women had the right to an education and the progress of all society depended on the fact that both sexes must be equally educated. Wollstonecraft explains that women should move away from their old emotional stereotypes and see education as the fundamental access to achieve a place in society.

The Rights of women contained other unconventional beliefs on society's standards of which Marriage was a constant theme. Marriage gave the husband legal ownership of his wife, her property, and their children. To divorce meant to leave everything behind. By being against Marriage Wollstonecraft was far ahead of her time, for in 18th century England a good marriage was the goal of most women. However for Wollstonecraft independence was essential and the only true freedom could be obtained from remaining unmarried. Marriage under law Wollstonecraft argued was nothing more than 'legalized prostitution'. These ideas were highlighted in her fictional tale Maria, where the protagonist is imprisoned in a mental hospital at the hands of her abusive husband. Maria reiterates Wollstonecraft's view on the disabilities that society imposed on women.

Wollstonecraft died in 1797 in the childbirth of Mary Wollstonecraft Godwin later to become Mary Shelley, author of Frankenstein. Though Wollstonecraft did not live to see her ideals in women's rights come to fruition, we are left with her vision when she states, "I have thrown down the gauntlet, it is time to restore women to their lost dignity and to make them a part of the human species."

Analysis

Wollstonecraft's works remain as a cornerstone in women's rights and laid the foundation for modern feminism, which sees education as the access to achieve greater economic, political, and social status.

Web Links

http://www.bartleby.com/144

This site provides the text of Wollstonecrafts’s A Vindication Of The Rights Of Woman.

http://www.xs4all.nl/~androom/biography/p001086.htm

This site provides a short biography of Wollstonecraft.

Print Sources

Sunstein, Emily, A Different Face: The Life of Mary Wollstonecraft, Little, Brown and Co, Boston Mass and Toronto, 1975
Todd, Janet, Mary Wollstonecraft, Weidenfeld and Nicholson, London, 2000

Tomalin, Claire, The Life and Death of Mary Wollstonecraft, Weidenfeld and Nicholson, London, 1974, Penguin, Harmondsworth, 1977, revised edn. Penguin, Harmondsworth, 1992.

Biographical Note: The information presented here was taken from the web sites featured. This page was compiled by Leah King for HIST 350, British History From 1688 to Present.

 

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Mary Wollstonecraft Pictures

Buy Pioneers of Women's Rights - Mary Wollstonecraft at Art.com
Pioneers of Women's Rights

Mary Wollstonecraft" by John Opie (National Portrait Gallery, London). (c1797)

Mary Wollstonecraft's tombstone at 'Old' St. Pancras Churchyard in London. Her remains were moved to Bournemouth after her daughter Mary Shelley died in 1851. The cemetery was largely broken up for the construction of the railroad in 1866.
Picture by Androom (14/12/1993)

 

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