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Mary Wollstonecraft: Mother of Women's Rights (Oxford Portraits)
 
 
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Mary Wollstonecraft: Mother of Women's Rights (Oxford Portraits) [Hardcover]

Miriam Brody (Author)

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Book Description

December 7, 2000 Oxford Portraits
Mary Wollstonecraft (1759-1797) was the first champion of women's rights in the modern Western world. Wollstonecraft's experience teaching young women in London led her to write her first book, in which she argued for equal education for girls and boys. The moderate success of her autobiographical novel Mary, A Fiction convinced her to start writing full-time. Under the tutelage of her publisher and mentor Joseph Johnson, she joined a circle of liberal intellectuals which included poet and artist William Blake, chemist Joseph Priestley, and political thinker William Godwin.
In 1790 Wollstonecraft penned A Vindication of the Rights of Men, an impassioned reply to conservative criticism of the French Revolution and a call for social equality. She developed her ideas further in A Vindication of the Rights of Woman, which extended the notion of natural rights to include women's rights as well. Going so far as to suggest that women should be allowed to vote, Wollstonecraft's revolutionary ideas garnered her overnight fame--and notoriety. She traveled to Paris, lived through the Reign of Terror, fell in love with an American, and gave birth to her first daughter. Though the love affair ended tragically, resulting in her thwarted suicide attempt, she happily wed William Godwin in 1797. That year she gave birth to her second child (the future author of Frankenstein Mary Shelley). She died a few days later from complications of childbirth.
Wollstonecraft's writing inspired leaders of the American woman suffrage movement, such as Susan B. Anthony and Elizabeth Cady Stanton, and moved one admirer to call her a "pioneer of modern womanhood."

Editorial Reviews

From School Library Journal

Gr 9 Up-Brody's colorful and ambitious subject lived at a time when women, like children, were encouraged to be seen, not heard. Wollstonecraft was an outspoken writer, single mother, proponent of equal rights and education for women, and radical nonbeliever in the institutions of marriage and religion. Her life reads like a modern soap opera. After attempting suicide over her former lover's disenchantment, she eventually agreed to marry William Godwin, also an anti-marriage individualist. She died shortly after giving birth to a daughter, Mary. The remainder of the book discusses Wollstonecraft's legacy and the history of women's rights. Containing primary-source material such as letters, excerpts from her books, photographs, and other memorabilia, this volume gives a good description of the life of an 18th-century female whose ideas and lifestyle were truly revolutionary at that time. A good addition to women's history collections.-Pat Bender, The Shipley School, Bryn Mawr, PA

Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information, Inc.

Review

"Incisive."--Horn Book Guide

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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
Mary Wollstonecraft's childhood was not happy. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
younger poets
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Mary Wollstonecraft, Joseph Johnson, Newington Green, William Godwin, Edward Wollstonecraft, Lady Kingsborough, United States, French Revolution, Thomas Paine, Richard Price, Gilbert Imlay, Jane Arden, Mary Godwin, Vindication of the Rights of Woman, Fanny Blood, Henry Fuseli, Hugh Skeys, American Revolution, Elizabeth Inchbald, George Blood, Mary Shelley, Meredith Bishop, Original Stories, Thomas Holcroft, Anna Barbauld
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