Wollstonecraft's A Vindication Of The Rights Of Woman

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During the late 18th Century and early 19th Century, woman questioned their roles in society. Women wanted the same rights as men. Many women stepped up and spoke out against their rights. They argued that they were entitled to an education to be a better wife and/or mother, they deserved representation in government, and they deserved the right to employment.
Women believed they had the right to an education. Some women, like Mary Wollstonecraft believed that an education would allow a woman to view her husband as a friend, rather than as her sole provider. In Wollstonecraft’s A Vindication of the Rights of Woman, she stated “... the woman who strengthens her body and exercises her mind will, by managing her family and practising various virtues, become the friend, and not the humble dependent, of her husband…” A woman with knowledge will be able to maintain her household and have a variety of virtues, which will ultimately help her establish a closer relationship to her significant other. Wollstonecraft also stated that a woman needed education to maintain her children. “At present I want only to insist that unless woman’s understanding is enlarged and her character made more firm through her being allowed to govern her own …show more content…

Women were being denied rights simply because they were woman. Judith Murray believed that if a woman isn’t given the opportunity to gain knowledge or experiences, then she should not be judged and considered less than a man. “We can only reason from what we know, and if an opportunity of acquiring knowledge hath been denied us, the inferiority of our sex cannot fairly be deduced from thence…” Women were brought up believing their responsibility was tending to household duties and taking care of family. They weren’t given the opportunity to show that their talents could also be used outside of the home. Women realized they had every right to exercise their

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