The Natural John Stuart Mill's The Subjection Of Women

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A “tyrannical head of family could not be a good leader in the society” (Kanu, 2012:252-257). Over raising the children he stated that the mothers as well as the fathers have rights to raise their children. Regarding the divorce Locke’s stance was that marriage might end by “consent, or at a certain time, or upon certain condition and that husband and wife might set whatever terms they wished to their relationship so long as these were conductive to the care of the young”(Hirschman & McClure ed.2007: 33). His ideas regarding property rights by the contract were also very much advanced for that period. He was among the first who advocated for equal educational opportunities for girls and boys. Regarding the slavery Locke claimed that “the natural …show more content…

He was a member of British Parliament from the Liberal Party. The book The Subjection of Women (1869) is the earliest one written on the topic of the subordination and prejudices towards women. There he gave a detailed argumentation to the social and legal inequalities imposed to women by patriarchal culture. He commented on three major areas of women’s lives: society, education and marriage. Mill challenged the notion that women are by nature unequal to men. He stated that “the legal subordination of one sex to the other is wrong in itself, and one of the chief hindrances to human improvement,” and “the systematic subordination of women by men ought to be replaced by a principle of perfect equality, admitting no power or privilege on the one side, nor disability on the other” (Mill, 2009:1). He compared the domination of men over women with slavery and stated that it originated only in the brutal application of men’s physical power. He claimed that there is no evidence that male domination is the expression of biological advancement of men over women. According to Mill voluntary submission of women was a misleading fact imposed by powerful

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