Wollstonecraft
Independent Woman
Classic Thinkers series

1. Auflage Mai 2025
230 Seiten, Softcover
Wiley & Sons Ltd
Famous as the author of A Vindication of the Rights of Woman, Mary Wollstonecraft was a wide-ranging and controversial moral and political philosopher. She engaged with many of the most polarising issues of her day: criticising social hierarchies, advocating for educational reform, analysing the French Revolution, and challenging men's political dominance.
In this illuminating introduction, Alan Coffee argues that the originality of Wollstonecraft's feminist arguments is best understood within the context of a systematic and comprehensive philosophical system built up from a set of 'simple' theological and moral principles. An effective way to approach this is through the concept of freedom as independence. Drawing on all of Wollstonecraft's works, including her novels, reviews and letters, Coffee shows how the ideal of independence illuminates and unites many of her intellectual preoccupations and her contribution to contemporary debates, such as on the structural nature of social injustice and the republican notion of freedom as non-domination.
This gripping account of Wollstonecraft's work sheds new light on one of the most important eighteenth-century thinkers.
Acknowledgements
Abbreviations
1 An Amazon Stept Out
2 Life, Works, Interlocutors
3 Religious Foundation
4 Independence
5 Mind
6 Education
7 Civil and Political Life
8 Marriage and Family Life
9 Mere Dolls
10 Legacy
Notes
Bibliography
Index
Sandrine Bergès, Bilkent University
"Alan Coffee treats Wollstonecraft's moral and political philosophy with the analytical respect, it has not always receives, but truly deserves. Demonstrating the centrality of the ideal of independence in her thought, he shows how exciting a thinker she remains."
Sylvana Tomaselli, University of Cambridge