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Mary Wollstonecraft

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Title: Mary Wollstonecraft


1
Mary Wollstonecraft
2
Women the Englightenment
The men of the Enlightenment did little to
improve the status of women, so women writers
took it upon themselves to start the change for
equality.
3
Historical Stand on Women and the Enlightenment
  • Although they were able to gain minimum knowledge
    and make a step towards equal rights, the
    Scientific Revolution and the Enlightenment
    didnt provide any particular benefits for women
    during their time.

4
Reason 1 Opportunities to be Involved were a
Minimum
  • Many women during the Enlightenment didnt have
    the opportunity to pursue an education in
    Sciences, and the quality of education they
    received was degraded from what it used to be.
  • Why? ---- They were to believed to be ignorant,
    and not capable of understanding.
  • A man by the name of Malebranche once said, All
    things of an abstracted nature are
    incomprehensible to them women, they cannot
    employ their imagination in disentangling
    compound questions (http//www.public.iastate.edu
    .)
  • Malebranche is basically saying that women are
    not as intellectual as men.
  • And because of this view on women, they were not
    allowed to attend classes other than those
    necessary to being a wife.

5
How does this Play into Women Not Benefiting?
  • We can look at Madame du Chatelet.
  • She was part of an upper class family in
  • Paris
  • Wife of Voltaire (famous for his works
  • criticizing Dogma)
  • Highly intelligenthad skills in Latin,
  • Italian, and many more, but her favorite was
    Mathematics.
  • Since higher education was reserved for men,
  • Madame du Chatelet hired professors to teach her
  • everything from writing to geometry

6
(Madame du Chatelet continued)
  • Most impressive accomplishment translation of
    Principia, Sir Issac Newtons work
  • She was able to comprehend the abstract things
    in Newtons book, something many people could
    never begin to do
  • Later, when Chatelet tried to join the Royal
    Academy of Scientists, a place where science was
    discussed, she was denied.
  • It was definitely not because of her lack of
    intelligence, because we know she was up there
    with all the men, it was because of one thing
    she was woman.
  • Just like this, capable women were restricted
    from expressing their knowledge, and learning
    more

7
Reason 2 Society just couldnt see women as
being as good as men
  • Women were seen as nothing more that housewives.
  • They were supposed to clean, cook, and take care
    of their families.
  • Some even saw them only as child-bearers
  • Since we are talking about the Scientific
    Revolution, you might think that this
    intellectual revolution would change the views of
    men.
  • Instead, they used the new science discoveries to
    prove women were inferior.
  • But, how? One theory uses the anatomy of males
    and females to prove male dominance

8
Reason 2 Society just couldnt see women as
being as good as men (continued)
  • Overall, men were just out to say that women were
    subordinate to them. They were just there to take
    part in the domestic areas.
  • An interesting quote----
  • A man said this regarding the excellent works of
    a woman academic
  • The writings are so good, you would hardly
    believe they were dont by a women at all
  • This just shows, men did not want to believe that
    some woman could be as smart as them.

9
Women During the Enlightenment
  • Educated women were still the exception, not the
    rule.
  • Women in France and England did participate
    actively in revolutionary groups.
  • Rousseau remained conventional on this issue,
    stating that women should be subservient to men.

10
Rousseau---Anti-Womens Rights
  • This typical view of women being inferior was
  • greatly expressed in the works of Rousseau.
  • Rousseau was born in Geneva his lifetime took
  • place after Louis XIV---he was involved in the
    French Revolution
  • Wrote several books on education, government, and
    women including Emile ou de l education, and Du
    Contrat social
  • The Emile ou de leductaion argued that the
    social roles of women and men should be different
  • Main Fact about Rousseau HE WAS ANTI-WOMENS
    RIGHTS!

11
  • Rousseau On the Education and Duties of Women
  • "The education of women should always be relative
    to that of men. To please, to be useful to us, to
    make us love and esteem them, to educate us when
    young, to take care of us when grown up, to
    advise, to console us, to render our lives easy
    and agreeable these are the duties of women at
    all times, and what they should be taught in
    their infancy."
  •   SO WHAT DO YOU THINK OF THAT?

12
Heres a Run Down of Rousseaus ANTI-WOMAN
thoughts
  • A woman is a link between the child and father
  • She is to maintain unity of the family
  • Men and woman should NOT have same education
  • Separate Spheres for Men and Women
  • Women should for menmake their lives agreeable
    and sweet---these are the duties of women at all
    times.
  • He like many other, believed women were not, and
    couldnt be anything more that simple domestic
    wives

13
Early feminism (1550-1700)
  • Concerns
  • No recourse to law for equality for pay or
    working conditions.
  • Married women had no legal independence
  • ( including no legal rights over children )
  • Economic access marriage
  • Woman as inferior race
  • Judeo-Christian negative associations/interpre
    tations as woman as temptation, secondary - from
    the rib of Adam
  • Improvements (upper class women only)
  • Conditions for education
  • Womens argument against inferiority leads to
    questions about culture and nature.
  • Small networking community established of British
    women writers

14
The cult of true womanhood portrayed the ideal
woman as pious, pure, domestic, and submissive.
15
Women Writers
  • Began to demand equal rights Mary
    WollstonecraftA Vindication of the Rights of
    Women.
  • In early 1800s, there were many women novelists
    Bronte sisters, George Eliot, Emily Dickinson,
    Margaret Fuller, Germaine Necker, George Sand.

16
Women like Mary Wollstonecraft pointed to the
unequal relationship as being contradictory to
the ideas of the Enlightenment.
Discussed womens education, participation in
government, and over all rights.
17
Mary Wollstonecraft (1759-1797), founder of
modern feminism
18
Women and the Enlightenment
Views on Womens Education Change Many
Enlightenment thinkers take traditional views
of womens role Prominent writer Mary
Wollstonecraft urges greater rights for women
- argues women need quality education to be
virtuous and useful - urges women to go into
traditionally male professions like
politics Some wealthy women use their status to
spread Enlightenment ideas
NEXT
19
Place of Woman in the World
  • For Wollstonecraft, building on Rousseau, the
    problem is not in nature but in the artificial
    relations we create -- or more accurately -- men
    create and women endure.

20
With Views like that, Someone is going to get
argue
  • Rousseaus fellow debater was
  • Mary Wollstonecraft
  • Born in London, England
  • She was a school head master
  • -thats where she began to realize the
  • subordination of women in terms of
  • education
  • Writer of Thoughts on the Education of Daughters,
    and History and Moral View of the Origins and
    Progress of the French Revolution
  • In 1792, she published A Vindication of the
    Rights of Woman, a text of hers that received the
    most attention

21
  • Mary Wollstonecraft
  • Enlightenment thinkers still held traditional
    views about women
  • Proper roles wives, mothers should receive
    limited education
  • Wollstonecraft demanded equal rights for women
  • A Vindication of the Rights of Woman, equal
    education for women

22
Woman in the World
  • It would be an endless task to trace the variety
    of meanness, cares, and sorrows, into which women
    are plunged by the prevailing opinion, that they
    were created rather to feel than reason, and that
    all the power they obtain must be obtained by
    their charms and weakness...

23
Woman in the World
  • In other words, prevailing opinion or the ways
    in which we choose to organize our social
    relations dictates the treatment of women -- and
    the way in which women see themselves in the
    society.

24
  • From Mary Wollstonecrafts book A Vindication of
    the Rights of Woman (1792)
  • If women be educated for dependence that is, to
    act according to the will of another fallible
    being, and submit, right or wrong, to power,
    where are we to stop?
  • The divine right of husbands, like the divine
    right of kings, may, it is hoped, in this
    enlightened age, be contested without danger.
  • I do not wish (women) to have power over men,
    but over themselves.

25
  • Historian Henry Noel Brailsford, in Shelley,
    Godwin, and Their Circle (1913), considered the
    Rights of Woman
  • "perhaps the most original book of its century."
  • "What was absolutely new in the world's history
    was that for the first time a woman dared to sit
    down to write a book which was not an echo of
    men's thinking, nor an attempt to do rather well
    what some man had done a little better, but a
    first exploration of the problems of society and
    morals from a standpoint which recognized
    humanity without ignoring sex."

26
Birth of Feminism
  • The intellectual roots of feminism start in the
    Enlightenment.
  • Mary Wollstonecraft the mother of modern
    feminism.
  • Vindication of the Rights of Woman
  • What were her two main arguments that
    enlightenment ideals supported equal rights for
    women?

27
Mary Wollstonecraft (1759-1797)
  • Wrote A Vindication of the Rights of Women
  • Argued for the rights of women
  • Opposed traditional restrictions on women
  • Believed that women should contribute to society
    and argued for their education

28
Mary Wollstonecraft
  • Was the daughter of a handkerchief weaver, and
    was born in iLondon in 1759
  • In 1784 she opened a school in Newington Green,
    where she made friends with Richard Price, a
    minister at the local chapel, where she also
    because close with Prices friend, Joseph
    Priestly
  • Price had written the book Review of the
    Principal Questions of Morals where he argued
    that individual conscience and reason should be
    used in making moral choices also rejected
    concept of original sin and eternal punishment
    (was, at times, accused of being an atheist OH NO
    AN ATHEIST!)
  • Mary was greatly influenced by Price, and this
    was made apparent by her 1786 book, Thoughts on
    the Education of Girls, where she attacked
    traditional teaching methods and suggested new
    topics that should be studied by girls

29
A Vindication of the Rights of Woman
  • Is like the rebuttle to Rousseaus Separate
    Spheres for Men and Women
  • Focused on importance of equal status of both
    men, and women
  • And that education was the key for a womans
    success
  • Mary Wollstonecraft was an extreme feminist who
    helped women make a step towards gaining equal
    right in the 20th century.

30
Women and the Enlightenment
  • Mary Wollstonecraft. A Vindication of the Rights
    of Women

31
Vindication of the Rights of Women
  • Is considered Wollstonecrafts most important
    book
  • In it, she attacked the education restrictions
    that kept women in a state of ignorance and
    slavish dependence, "and was especially critical
    of a society that encouraged women to be docile
    and attentive to their looks to the exclusion of
    all else
  • She called marriage legal prostitution and
    added that women may be convenient slaves, but
    slavery will have its constant effect, degrading
    the master and the abject dependent.
  • Her book caused much controversy, with passionate
    people on both sides of the argument many a
    vituperative comment was made. She had even
    shocked other radicals, who had declared that
    education for women would have been pointless
  • Mary had to flee to France, but there died in
    childbirth after marriage. Her daughter was Mary
    Shelby the author of the famous Frankenstein

32
A Vindication of the Rights of Woman
Civilized women are, therefore, so weakened by
false refinement, that, respecting morals, their
condition is much below what it would be were
they left in a state nearer to nature To remain,
it may be said, innocent they mean in a state of
childhood Fragile in every sense of the word,
they are obliged to look up to man for every
comfort if fear in girls, instead of being
cherished, perhaps, created, were treated in the
same manner as cowardice in boys, we should
quickly see women with more dignified aspects I
do not wish them to have power over men but over
themselves
33
A Vindication of the Rights of Women
  • Excerpt from A Vindication of the Rights of
    Women It is vain to expect virtue from women
    till they are in some degree independent of men
    nay, it is vain to expect that strength of
    natural affection which would make them good
    wives and mothers. Whilst they are absolutely
    dependent upon their husbands they will be
    cunning, mean, and selfish. The preposterous
    distinction of rank, which render civilization a
    curse, by dividing the world between voluptuous
    tyrants and cunning envious dependents, corrupt,
    almost equally, every class of people.

34
Mary Wollstonecraft, Frances Wright, and Margaret
Fuller believed that giving women an equal
education to that of men would do more to improve
womens position in society than voting rights.
35
Mary Astell 1666 1731AD
  • A Serious Proposal to the Ladies
  • Better education and equality in marriage
  • Mary Astell is one of the earliest women
    philosophers of the early modern period not born
    into the class of nobility or wealth that allowed
    women to expand their intellectual horizons.
  • She is hailed today as one of the first feminists
    chiefly because of her outspoken beliefs
    concerning the education of women and her
    thoughts concerning marriage

36
Mary Astell
  • Women's lack of choice in marriage especially
    irritates Astell.  Men who flatter them with
    praise while seeking their favor make them
    foolish (cf. Astrophil). 
  • Women who can't find a husband are thought
    incompetent and no man can imagine himself not
    worthy of being any woman's suitor.  
  • Learned women are mocked by the world at large,
    whereas men not uncommonly waste their time in
    pursuit of their lusts. 
  • Women who sacrifice themselves to submission to
    a man are heroic in their self-control and in
    their service to God and mankind, but if they
    thought about it more carefully, they probably
    would not do it.  Hence, the number of women who
    marry in haste.
  • Happy marriages are few, she asserts, because the
    way the institution operates in her England,
    money (income) is the primary qualification for
    most of them, with no thought for emotional
    compatibility, and poverty resulting from a "love
    match" renders the other sort miserable. 
  • Men who marry for love are irregular, by
    definition, especially if they admire their
    spouses for wit, a term she criticizes as having
    fallen into being "bitter and ill-natured
    raillery" (2282) rather than "true wit," "such a
    sprightliness of imagination, such a reach and
    turn of thought, so properly expressed, as
    strikes and pleases a judicious taste" (2282). 
  • She dismisses intense passion as unstable and no
    good grounds for a long-term relationship

37
Women and the Enlightenment
  • Changing views
  • Role of education
  • Equality

Mary Wollstonecraft
Olympe de Gouges
38
Olympe de Gouges
  • Was born in 1748 in Montauban near Toulouse in
    France as Marie Gouze.
  • Little attention was given to her education
    therefore, she could hardly read or write, and
    only spoke French poorly and later dictated all
    of her work to a secretary.
  • Moved to pre-revolutionary Paris and changed her
    name to blend in more with the people of the
    city.
  • Lived under the support of her lover and
    underwent criticism for this to achieve her dream
    of becoming a writer.
  • Attempted to live in Paris as a theater author
    but she did not succeed.
  • Once wrote, Why this unswerving prejudice
    against my sex? Will it ever be allowed for
    women to escape from the terror of poverty other
    than by base means.
  • In 1789, began to write politically after the
    beginning of revolutionary events.
  • (cont)

39
Olympe de Gouges
  • Printed her social-political ideas onto posters
    with her own money and hung them around Paris.
  • Wrote the Declaration of the Rights of Women and
    Women Citizens not soon after.
  • Wrote The Three Urns or the Welfare of the
    Fatherland and was arrested for the opinions
    expressed in the paper, for which she was
    eventually arrested, for she had been a major
    supporter of the Girondists, she had suggested a
    referendum on three possible forms of government
  • She had also publicly defended the king in
    December 1782, mostly for humanitarian reasons
    she wanted to achieve a reformation of society
    through words, through her writing and her
    continual appeals for nonviolence
  • She thus remained a true representative of the
    Enlightenment despite her differences with
    Rousseau
  • She was beheaded on November 3, 1793 after an
    unfair trial not only for her being a member of
    the Girondists but because she supported womens
    rights, for two weeks after her death, her body
    was held up in front of the crowd to show what
    would happen to those who supported women

40
Aims of the Declaration of the Rights of Woman
  • Education for women
  • Equal opportunities for women
  • In employment
  • A claim to land
  • Equality for women in the eyes of the law
  • Women must receive equal punishments

41
Aims, Continued
  • A social contract between men and women in
    marriage
  • All wealth is shared
  • In the case of separation all property divided
  • Women and men equal in a marriage
  • Womens suffrage
  • A national assembly of women
  • Equal rights for women
  • Natural rights
  • Freedom of speech

42
From De Gouges Declaration of the Rights of
Woman and the Female Citizen
  • Woman, wake up discover your rights.
  • Oh, women, women! When will you cease to be
    blind?
  • Regardless of what barriers confront you, it is
    in your power to free yourselves you have only
    to want to
  • I offer a foolproof way to elevate the soul of
    women it is to join them to all the activities
    of man
  • Man Tell me, what gives you sovereign empire to
    oppress my sex?

43
Olympe de Gouges
  • Excerpt from Declaration of the Rights of Woman
    and the Female Citizen
  • ignorance, omission, and scorn for the rights
    of women are only causes of public misfortune and
    of the corruption of governments, the women
    have resolved to set forth in a solemn
    declaration the natural, inalienable, and sacred
    rights of woman in order that this declaration,
    constantly exposed before all the members of this
    society, will ceaselessly remind them of their
    rights and duties in order that the
    authoritative acts of women and authoritative
    acts of men may be at any moment compared with
    and respectful of the purpose of all political
    institutions and in order that the citizens
    demands, henceforth based on simple and
    incontestable principles, will always support the
    constitution, good morals, and the happiness of
    all.

44
A Quick Sum Up of why Women did not Benefit
  • 1 Lack of Opportunities
  • 2 Views of Society
  • 3 Especially the views of men Remember Rosseau,
    the ANTI-FEMINIST guy.
  • Along with educational setbacks, women still did
    not have many political rights during this time
    such as property owning, or voting like the men.
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