Comparing The Slavery Of Fredrick Douglass And Mary Wollstonecraft

1162 Words3 Pages

The Enlightenment period was a time when the world opened its eyes to see that there was nothing different from the everyday man or woman compared to the King or Queen. During this period writers would put their feelings into literary pieces, though, some were not popular at that time, are still being read today. Two literary pieces that were written on the opposite sides of the world, one by Fredrick Douglass, and the other by Mary Wollstonecraft fight for similar rights. One is a slave in the eyes of the world, but the other is a slave in the eyes of man and whose only purpose is to do house work. Who is the true slave? Frederick Douglass was born into the life of a slave, and at an early age was ripped away from his mother Harriet. …show more content…

Born as a free woman in London, England Mary argued for education along with unjust laws for women that subjected them to a form of slavery. As the world around her at the time was facing a political breakthrough with the United States using idea’s formed by philosophers John Locke and Thomas Hobbes theories in the social contract, to break free from England, she hoped the French Revolution would create an era of equality and reason. Wollstonecraft places her opinion that the condition of adult women is caused by the neglect of education for girls. Most of the essay is based on her argument for education of …show more content…

In the time of Mary Wollstonecraft people believed reason was a gift from God, and that God was in favor of the social change. Mary questions how almost have of the population is without the capacity for rational thought which would make it a design flaw from God. In her first chapter Mary states, “Firmly persuaded that no evil exists in the world that God designed to take place, I build my belief on the perfection of God.” Mary refuses to believe that God would create a woman that is intended to be weak. Her belief that people not nature is the reason why women are the way they

Open Document