ABSTRACT

Mary Wollstonecraft’s 1792 Vindication of the Rights of Women is an incendiary attack on the place of women in 18th-century society.

Often considered to be the earliest widely-circulated work of feminism, the book is a powerful example of what can be achieved by creative thinkers – people who refuse to be bound by the standard ways of thinking, or to see things through the same lenses that everyone else uses. In the case of the Vindication, Wollstonecraft’s independent thinking went directly against the standard assumptions of the age regarding women.

During the seventeenth century and earlier, it was an entirely standard point of view to consider women as, largely speaking, uneducable. They were widely considered to be men’s inferiors, incapable of rational thought. They not only did not need a rational education – it was assumed that they could not benefit from one. Wollstonecraft, in contrast, argued that women’s apparent triviality was a direct consequence of society failing to educate them. If they were not men’s equals, it was the fault of a society that refused to treat them as such. So radical was her message that it would take until the 20th century for her views to become truly accepted.

section 1|20 pages

Influences

chapter |4 pages

Module 2 Academic Context

chapter |5 pages

Module 3 The Problem

chapter |5 pages

Module 4 The Author’s Contribution

section 2|21 pages

Ideas

chapter |5 pages

Module 5 Main Ideas

chapter |5 pages

Module 6 Secondary Ideas

chapter |5 pages

Module 7 Achievement

chapter |5 pages

Module 8 Place in the Author’s Work

section 3|19 pages

Impact

chapter |5 pages

Module 9 The First Responses

chapter |4 pages

Module 10 The Evolving Debate

chapter |5 pages

Module 11 Impact and Influence Today

chapter |4 pages

Module 12 Where Next?