Mary Wollstonecraft

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Mary Wollstonecraft: the Mother of Modern Feminism
Mary Wollstonecraft was a self-educated, radical philosopher who wrote about liberation, and empowering women. She had a powerful voice on her views of the rights of women to get good education and career opportunities. She pioneered the debate for women’s rights inspiring many of the 19th and the 20th century’s writers and philosophers to fight for women’s rights, as well. She did not only criticize men for not giving women their rights, she also put a blame on women for being voiceless and subservient. Her life and, the surrounding events of her time, accompanied by the strong will of her, had surely affected the way she chose to live her life, and to form her own philosophies.
Mary Wollstonecraft was born in London on April 27th of 1759 to a poor family of 7 children where she was the second. She did not receive any formal education; only her brother, Edward, was to have that advantage. Her father was a tyrannical man who abused and bullied her mother. When Mary reached the age of 19, she decided to leave home and find her own way in life. She could not tolerate seeing a woman mistreated by her man, and so she helped her sister, Eliza, by hiding her from her husband until she got separated. Then, with the help of her sister and their friend Francis Fanny Blood, they established a school. Even though that school collapsed quickly, Mary used what she learned from this experience to form her theories on education. After that, Mary moved to Ireland to work as a governess to Lord Kings Borough’s family. She also had her influence on the girls she helped taking care of by teaching them how to be independent.
In 1787, Mary went back to London pursuing a literary career as a transla...

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...eth century, however, the increasing concentration on feminism had led the scholars, such as Virginia Sapiro, to focus more on her views and philosophy, which renewed the interest in her works. One of the early critical readers of Wollstonecraft’s “Rights of Woman” was Hannah Mather Crocker (1752-1829). She wrote her book “Observation son the Real Reights of Women with their Appropriate Duties, Agreeable to Scripture, Reason, and Common Sense” which was the first American work on women’s rights. In her book, there were many similar ideas to Mary’s: equal intellectual potential and capacities of both men and women, a friendship between a man and a women should be a basis for their marriage, and the need for educational reform for women. Crocker, however, did not raise the issue of women’s right to employment or to political citizenship. (Botting, and Carey. 710-12).

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