Mary Wollstonecraft — "I have a soul that is too proud to stoop to any meanness."
I have a soul that is too proud to stoop to any meanness.
I have a soul that is too proud to stoop to any meanness.
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"The beginning is always today."
"The education of women has been so managed that the sex has been rendered an artificial, weak character, and, consequently, more or less useless members of society."
"I am not a slave to the fashion of the day, nor to the prejudice of any age."
"I have a heart that is ready to burst with the tenderest affection, and a head that is full of the most exalted notions."
"Pleasure is the business of a woman's life, according to the present modification of society."
English writer and proto-feminist philosopher whose A Vindication of the Rights of Woman (1792) is the founding text of modern feminist theory. Closely associated with Thomas Paine (Rights of Man co-conspirator and revolutionary contemporary) and William Godwin (her husband and philosopher of anarchism). For an intellectual contrast, see Edmund Burke, Anglo-Irish conservative and parliamentarian — Burke's Reflections on the Revolution in France (1790) was the explicit target of Wollstonecraft's first book — A Vindication of the Rights of Men (1790), written in the weeks after Burke's appeared. She extended the argument to women in her second Vindication two years later. Burke's tradition-and-prescription conservatism is the worldview Wollstonecraft's career was structured against.
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