Mary Wollstonecraft — "The woman who has only been taught to please will soon find that her power is of…"
The woman who has only been taught to please will soon find that her power is of short duration.
The woman who has only been taught to please will soon find that her power is of short duration.
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"Marriage is a state of slavery for women."
"Security is the very first characteristic of happiness."
"The most perfect education, in my opinion, is such an exercise of the understanding as is best calculated to strengthen the body and form the heart. Or, in other words, to enable the individual to att…"
"I have a soul that is too generous to be selfish."
"The being who can govern itself, has an empire which the most despotic monarch cannot boast."
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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