Mary Wollstonecraft worked as a schoolteacher and headmistress at a school she established at Newington Green with her sister Eliza. The sisters soon became convinced that the young women they tried to teach had already been effectively confined by their social training in subordination to men. In one of her books, Wollstonecraft criticizes Enlightenment ideals on education for women. The ideals were that women’s rational natures are no less capable of intellectual achievement than are those of men. But through the adversity, she manages to write the novel, A Vindication of the Rights of Men (1790). The novel is a vigorous justification of the ideals of the French Revolution, through which she becomes famous for over
Mary Wollstonecraft worked as a schoolteacher and headmistress at a school she established at Newington Green with her sister Eliza. The sisters soon became convinced that the young women they tried to teach had already been effectively confined by their social training in subordination to men. In one of her books, Wollstonecraft criticizes Enlightenment ideals on education for women. The ideals were that women’s rational natures are no less capable of intellectual achievement than are those of men. But through the adversity, she manages to write the novel, A Vindication of the Rights of Men (1790). The novel is a vigorous justification of the ideals of the French Revolution, through which she becomes famous for over