The Radical Ideas of Mary Wollstonecraft
- Resource Type
- Authors
- Susan Ferguson
- Source
- Subject
- Scholarship
Class (set theory)
Liberalism
Sociology and Political Science
Political science
Political economy
International political economy
Political culture
Quality (philosophy)
Environmental ethics
Socialist feminism
Feminism
- Language
Recent scholarship on Mary Wollstonecraft portrays her as either a liberal who disrupts the boundaries between public and private spheres or as a proto-socialist paving the road for a class-based feminism. Neither of these characterizations adequately captures the radical quality of her work. A close study of her views on class and family place her squarely within the liberal tradition of political economy. While she politicizes these institutions and, in so doing represents a threat to the latenineteenth-century British ruling classes, she neither disrupts the basic tenets of liberalism nor seriously anticipates the class insights of socialist feminism.