Mary Wollstonecraft, 1759-1797
The Anglo-Irish feminist, intellectual and writer, Mary Wollstonecraft, was
born in London, the second of six children. Her father, Edward John
Wollstonecraft, was a family despot who bullied his wife, Elizabeth Dixon, into
a state of wearied servitude. He spent a fortune which he had inherited in
various unsuccessful ventures at farming which took the family to six different
locales throughout Britain by 1780, the year Mary's mother died.
At the age
of nineteen Mary went out to earn her own livelihood. In 1783, she helped her
sister Eliza escape a miserable marriage by hiding her from a brutal husband
until a legal separation was arranged. The two sisters established a school at
Newington Green, an experience from which Mary drew to write Thoughts on the
Education of Daughters: With Reflections on Female Conduct, in the More
Important Duties of Life (1787). Mary became the governess in the family of
Lord Kingsborough, living most of the time in Ireland. Upon her dismissal in 1787,
she settled in George Street, London, determined to take up a literary career.
In 1788 she
became translator and literary advisor to Joseph Johnson, the publisher of
radical texts. In this capacity she became acquainted with and accepted among
the most advanced circles of London intellectual and radical thought. When
Johnson launched the Analytical Review in 1788, Mary became a regular
contributor of articles and reviews. In 1790 she produced her Vindication of
the Rights of Man, the first response to Edmund Burke's Reflections on
the Revolution in France. She was furious that the man who had once
defended the American colonies so eloquently should now assault the sacred
revolution and libel Richard price, a close friend of her Newington days.
In 1792, she
published her Vindication on the Rights of
Woman, an important work which, advocating equality
of the sexes, and the main doctrines of the later women's movement, made her
both famous and infamous in her own time. She ridiculed prevailing notions
about women as helpless, charming adornments in the household. Society had bred
"gentle domestic brutes." "Educated in slavish dependence and
enervated by luxury and sloth," women were too often nauseatingly
sentimental and foolish. A confined existence also produced the sheer
frustration that transformed these angels of the household into tyrants over
child and servant. Education held the key to achieving a sense of self-respect
and anew self-image that would enable women to put their capacities to good
use.
In Maria, or the
Wrongs of Woman, published unfinished in
Paris in 1798, Mary asserted that women had strong sexual desires and that it
was degrading and immoral to pretend otherwise. This work alone sufficed to
damn Mary in the eyes of critics throughout the following century.
In 1792 she
set out for Paris. There, as a witness of Robespierre's Reign of Terror, she
collected materials for An Historical and Moral View of the Origins and
Progress of the French Revolution: and the effect it has Produced in Europe
(vol I, 1794), a book which was sharply critical of the violence evident even
in the early stages of the French Revolution.
At the home
of some English friends in Paris Mary met Captain Gilbert Imlay, an
American timber-merchant, the author of The Western Territory of North
America (1792). She agreed to become his common law wife and at Le Havre in
May 1794, she bore him a daughter, Fanny. In November 1795, after a four
months' visit to Scandinavia as his "wife," she tried to drown
herself from Putney Bridge, Imlay having deserted her.
Mary
eventually recovered her courage and went to live with William Godwin in Somers-town with whom she had first met at the home of Joseph Johnson
in 1791. Although both Godwin and Mary abhorred marriage as a form of tyranny,
they eventually married due to Mary's pregnancy (March 1797). In August, a
daughter Mary (who later became Shelley's wife), was born and on September 10 the mother
died.
Mary Wollstonecraft
was a radical in the sense that she desired to bridge the gap between mankind's
present circumstances and ultimate perfection. She was truly a child of the
French Revolution and saw a new age of reason and benevolence close at hand.
Mary undertook the task of helping women to achieve a better life, not only for
themselves and for their children, but also for their husbands. Of course, it
took more than a century before society began to put her views into effect.
copyright
© 2000 Steven Kreis
Last Revised –May 13,2004
URL http://www.historyguide.org/intellect/wollstonecraft.html
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