A Vindication of the Rights of Woman

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    taught judiciously, permitted to practice their characteristic capacities, and held to the same sensible principles of conduct since ladies share the endowment of reason and have an indistinguishable intrinsic human incentive from men. A Vindication of the Rights of Woman, her most renowned work on these subjects, was an astoundingly front line book in 1792, contending, for instance, that young ladies and young men ought to be co-taught and that ladies and men ought to share parental duties.…

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    this collection focus primarily on various gender roles in certain cultures and different centuries. In Geoffrey Chaucer’s “The Wife of Bath’s Tale”, women were manifested as holy figures who are to be treated purely. In the essay, “A Vindication of the Rights of Women”suggested that women were treated as housewives and instructed to be utterly submissive to men. In “The Men We Carry in Our Minds”, the gender roles of men were regarded and discussed. These numerous texts portray a shifting…

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    Change can be created by challenging the system. 17th and 18th century thinkers were hopeful that they might discover new ways to make their society better. They believed that allowing individuals more freedom and reducing government control would make society better. The philosophes believed that individual freedom could improve society in three areas: government, religion, and the social role of women. Individual freedom was an important part of John Locke’s ideas on government. John Locke an…

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    death with him. At the right, a guard stabs one of the women as the king looks on.” However, the tenacious women of the French Revolution prevailed and came out of the era respectfully superior than prior. With many employment opportunities brought along due to the French Revolution, women were beginning to find themselves worth more than a pretty face.…

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    American Revolution, which began in 1775 and ended in 1787. Next, was the French Revolution which began in 1789 and lasted until 1815. The French Revolution began by the Declaration of the Rights of Man and Citizen being developed. This declaration fought for the idea that “men are born and remained free and equal in right.” The French and North American Revolutions differed in many ways. A few of these ways are how its influence spread, how violent they were, and the conflicts they had. Where…

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    Wollstonecraft also wrote “Vindication of the Rights of Women” during a period where political authority was being challenged and questioned; citizens did not want to be oppressed by their monarch. Wollstonecraft uses this political upheaval to her advantage when she likens civilians and their monarch to women and men, as it is the same unjust, oppression (Wollstonecraft 232). Although authority…

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    that had the courage to stand up and fight for what they believed in. On that note I argue that men and women both deserve the same rights and privileges as both are courageous and essential to the nation and world. In Mary Wollstonecraft’s, “Vindication of the Rights of Women,” the author argues that an educated woman needs rights of freedom; otherwise this woman will find no reason of why she should be virtuous. Mary, explains and develops this point through the story in many ways. throughout…

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    of religion for answers without fear of prosecution. It challenged the social structures including those of women. Although the Age of Reason was a male centered movement, many women still played active parts. During this time women had very little rights and limited access to education. Women were placed in such strong traditional roles as housewives and mothers, that it was only possible for highly educated women of elite status to break out and even then only with the help of their husbands…

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    Stephen Jay Gould, and "A Vindication of the Rights of Women" by Mary Wollstonecraft. In "The Revolt Of Mother", the women, the mother, and wife finds herself being constantly ignored, and not heard by the husband by society's expectations is the superior. In "Women's Brain" the author Stephen Jay Gould writes about a woman, Mary, Who changes her name to George Eliot, A recognizable male name, so that she could publish her book "Middlemarch." In " A Vindication of the rights of Women" by Mary…

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    self-examination that resulted in a call for change are “A Vindication of the Rights of Women.” by Mary Wollstonecraft and “Declaration of the Rights of Man and of the Citizen.” by the National Assembly of France. The two works demonstrate self-understanding by presenting a problem they have noticed in their society, proposing a solution, and by addressing the role that individuals play in bringing about change. In “A Vindication of the Rights of…

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