If youâve heard of the 18th century English writer Mary Wollstonecraft, itâs likely because of her 1792 book A Vindication of the Rights of Woman, a muchcited entry in both the feminist and the classical liberal canons. In Wollstonecraft: Philosophy, Passion, and Politics, the Cambridge historian Sylvana Tomaselli aims to reveal the rest of Wollstonecraftâs worldview, demonstrating that she was more than just an early advocate for womenâs education and womenâs rights.
Wollstonecraft, Tomaselli shows, had an oeuvre âimpressive in its variety, originality, and indeed volume, given her tumultuous existenceâ and âher lifeâs brevity.â (Wollstonecraft died at age 38, shortly after the birth of her daughter, Frankenstein author Mary Shelley.) The book details its namesakeâs views on such topics as reason, human nature, God, sex, revolution, slavery, her intellectual contemporaries,âŠ