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Mary Wollstonecraft's A Vindication Of The Rights Of Women

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At a time when women’s education was not a prominent focus of society, Mary Wollstonecraft wrote A Vindication of the Rights of Women to discuss the significance in girls obtaining a more rightly education in order to prosper as a society. Mary Wollstonecraft focused her writing on calling attention to the disparity between the image presented of women by society with that of the truth of women and their capabilities. Wollstonecraft believed that every person, no matter their age, gender or social class had an individual mind that they had the right to express, a concept she promoted in A Vindication of the Rights of Men. Wollstonecraft would have been unable to voice these radical ideas if it weren’t for Minister Richard Price inviting her …show more content…

This is a prime example of the accepted subordination that women were to exemplify, and this "reappears often in European men's writings about women" (Anderson and Zinsser xiv). But not all women were willing to accept this fate; some wanted more to come of their lives and empower others to give significance to their lives, despite the limits and restrictions presented by their gender. If a woman were to rule over men and voice her opinions, as Wollstonecraft did, she was deemed “unwomanly” in the eyes of society. This is best expressed by the Encyclopedias of the 18th century which depicted men and woman as opposites. “Women were emotional; men were rational; women were passive; men were active. Women were gentle; men were aggressive. A woman’s virtues were chastity and obedience; a man’s courage and honor. Women were meant for the home; men for public life” (Anderson and Zinsser 143). The notion of Wollstonecraft voicing her opinion in this group was truly unheard of in this time period. Unlike other woman of her time, Mary Wollstonecraft stood out for her ideals because she "urged that women be more serious, more charitable, and more moral" (Anderson and Zinsser 123). When Wollstonecraft attended

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