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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
22 of 29 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Deserves at least 6 stars!,
This review is from: The Life and Death of Mary Wollstonecraft: Revised Edition (Mass Market Paperback)
Mary Wollstonecraft was an excessively unsympathetic character - she was a user( in modern parlance anyway), she manipulated, she was deliberately obstructive and astonishingly naive and yet Tomalin's biography of this most irritating of women kept me completely enthralled from beginning to end. Wollstonecraft certainly was neither deified or demonised here - simply left to tell her own story through her actions.There is very little quoted material in her, it is pretty much a narrative of her life from childhood through to her death. Tomalin has done enormous research on her life, the pieces tie in together seamlessly. Wollstonecraft was (of course) the woman who wrote that seminal work on the Rights of Women - and that really seems to be her predominant claim to fame although her lifestyle was very unusual for her times - having open relationships with men (including married men such as the artist Fuseli). I was mostly struck by how little success she really acheived in her lifetime despite her driving attitude to work and enormous energy - it seems although it was all misdirected or perhaps that was a good thing considering her beliefs (odd for her time) and her resentments (numerous and very often unfounded) Very very enjoyable read.
0 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
Unbelievably biased,
By Philosopher "mantellata" (Canada) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Life and Death of Mary Wollstonecraft (Kindle Edition)
I do not think I have ever seen a biographical piece of writing that was less objective. I downloaded the Kindle free sample and I have seen enough not to continue with the purchase. The author very evidently has some small-minded interpretations of Mary Wollstonecraft's psychology which colors the way in which facts are presented - some crucial factors are minimalized, such as her father's violence and the intra-family biases, which a cursory reading of Wollstonecraft's work would help to shed more light on.Aspersions on Wollstonecraft's personality because of her just and rational critiques is rather ironic - this is precisely evidence the mind-boggling inequality that insists on polite conformity at all costs for women - exactly the point which Wollstonecraft was trying to make and it only serves to lower my opinion of this author's intelligence. Moreover, most of the construction of Wollstonecraft's early character are built - not on facts or witness accounts - but on baseless and sly innuendo - for example - she cites an account that little Mary went to visit an old lady "contrary to her will" (who - by the way, committed suicide in delirium and Mary's image of the corpse would haunt her for the rest of her life) as evidence that Mary was ill-tempered and imperious - allegations which hardly match the numerous factual occasions of her self-sacrificing generosity - let alone the sensitive, critical and reflective temper of her moral writings. There is no evidence of any attempts to be "objective" or "critical" or to address different perspectives or interpretations. The author of this text is the sort of person who could join the spiteful peanut gallery that immediately followed in this daring and brilliant woman's wake and tried to minimize her massive creative and critical contributions to the literature and moral and political philosophy of her day and ours.
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