Mary Wollstonecraft

About The Book

Best known as author of <i>A Vindication of the Rights of Woman</i> (1792) if not also as mother of <i>Frankenstein</i>'s author Mary Shelley Mary Wollstonecraft survived domestic violence and unusual independent womanhood to write engaging letters fiction history critical reviews handbooks and treatises. Her work on coeducational thought was a major early modern influence upon the development of a post-Enlightenment tradition and continues to have vital relevance today.<br/><br/>Celebrated as an early modern feminist abolitionist and socialist philosopher Wollstonecraft had little formal schooling but still worked as a governess school-teacher and educational writer. This succinct critical account of that prolific research begins by recounting her revolutionary self-education. Susan Laird explains how Wollstonecraft came to criticize moral flaws in both men's and women's private education based on irrational assumptions about 'sexual character' under the Divine Right of Kings. It was to remedy those moral flaws of monarchist education that Wollstonecraft theorized her influential but incomplete concept of publicly financed universal egalitarian coeducation.
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