All Thinkers

Mary Wollstonecraft

Mary Wollstonecraft (1759–1797) was a British writer, philosopher, and early advocate for women's rights. She grew up in poverty and educated herself by reading widely and working as a teacher and governess. In 1792 she published A Vindication of the Rights of Woman — one of the first serious arguments that women deserved the same education and political rights as men. She died at the age of 38, shortly after giving birth to her daughter Mary, who would later write Frankenstein. Wollstonecraft's ideas were ignored or mocked for much of the century after her death, but she is now recognised as one of the founders of modern feminism.

Origin
England, Britain
Lifespan
1759–1797
Era
early-modern
Subjects
Philosophy Politics Education History Ethics Sociology
Why They Matter

Wollstonecraft asked a question that seemed radical in her time and remains relevant today: why are women educated to be decorative and dependent rather than rational and free? She argued that the way women were taught — to please, to be passive, to value appearance over mind — was not natural. It was the result of a system that deliberately kept women ignorant so that men could control them. She believed that if women were given the same education as men, they would prove themselves equally capable of reason, virtue, and citizenship. Her argument connects directly to questions about who education is for, what it is trying to produce, and whose potential it values or ignores. In many classrooms around the world, these questions are still urgent.

Key Ideas
1
Women are rational beings — not ornaments
Wollstonecraft's central argument was simple but powerful: women are just as capable of reason as men. In her time, most people — including most educated people — believed that women were naturally emotional, weak, and suited only for domestic life. Wollstonecraft said this was wrong. Women appeared this way not because of nature but because of how they were raised and educated. If you teach someone from childhood that their only value is their appearance and their ability to please others, they will become exactly that. The problem was the system, not the women.
2
Education shapes who people become
Wollstonecraft believed that education is one of the most powerful forces in human life. The way children are taught shapes their character, their ambitions, and their sense of what is possible for them. In her time, girls were taught to be charming and obedient. Boys were taught to think, argue, and lead. She argued that this difference was not inevitable — it was a choice. And it was a choice that had enormous consequences: it produced women who were dependent and men who were poorly served by wives who could not be their intellectual equals or honest moral companions.
Key Quotations
"I do not wish women to have power over men, but over themselves."
— A Vindication of the Rights of Woman, 1792
This is perhaps Wollstonecraft's most quotable line and one of her most important. She was not arguing that women should dominate men — she was arguing for self-determination. The ability to make your own choices, form your own opinions, and live according to your own judgement rather than being directed entirely by others. She believed this kind of self-possession was the foundation of genuine dignity and genuine virtue. Without it, people — women in particular — could not be fully human in the moral sense.
"Taught from infancy that beauty is woman's sceptre, the mind shapes itself to the body."
— A Vindication of the Rights of Woman, 1792
Wollstonecraft is describing how education shapes people from the very beginning. If girls are taught from birth that their power comes from their appearance, they will invest all their energy there — and neglect to develop their minds. She is not blaming women for this. She is blaming the system that produces it. This observation is still relevant today: when young people — girls in particular — receive persistent messages that their appearance matters more than their intelligence or character, the effects on their development are real and measurable.
Using This Thinker in the Classroom
General / Opening discussion When asking students whether education treats boys and girls differently
How to introduce
Ask students: In your school or community, do boys and girls receive the same education? Are they encouraged towards the same subjects and futures? Are the expectations the same? After discussion, introduce Wollstonecraft: she asked exactly this question more than 200 years ago — and her answer was that the differences were not natural but produced by a system that wanted to keep women dependent. Ask: Has anything changed since her time? What has changed and what has not?
Critical Literacy When examining how girls and women are represented in texts and media
How to introduce
Ask students to look at a text — a story, a textbook, an advertisement, or a film — and ask: how are women and girls shown? Are they active or passive? Are they valued for their minds or their appearance? Are they making decisions or waiting for decisions to be made for them? Introduce Wollstonecraft's observation: the way women are shown in texts both reflects and shapes what people think women are for. Ask: does this text treat women as rational human beings or as decorative figures? What does that choice tell us about whose humanity is fully valued?
Further Reading

The best starting point is a short summary of A Vindication of the Rights of Woman — many accessible versions are available online. The BBC's In Our Time podcast has an episode on Wollstonecraft that provides an excellent 45-minute introduction to her life and ideas. Bee Rowlatt's In Search of Mary Shelley — written about Wollstonecraft's daughter — includes accessible material on Wollstonecraft's life.

Key Ideas
1
The Rights of Woman — equality before reason
Wollstonecraft wrote A Vindication of the Rights of Woman as a direct response to the French Revolution and to thinkers like Rousseau who argued for the rights of men but explicitly excluded women. She argued that if reason is what makes humans worthy of rights — as Enlightenment thinkers claimed — then women, who are equally capable of reason, must be equally worthy of rights. The argument is elegant: it uses the premises of the dominant political philosophy of her time to reach a conclusion that philosophy had refused to draw. You cannot claim reason is the basis of rights and then deny rights to people who are equally rational.
2
Rousseau's Sophie — Wollstonecraft's main target
One of Wollstonecraft's most important intellectual targets was Jean-Jacques Rousseau, who was enormously influential in her time. Rousseau's educational treatise Emile described in detail how boys should be educated to be free, rational, and independent. But his ideal woman — Sophie — was educated entirely to please and serve Emile. She was taught to be dependent, charming, and subordinate. Wollstonecraft found this contradiction deeply dishonest: a philosopher who championed human freedom and reason, but designed a system that deliberately produced unfree, irrational women. Her critique of Rousseau is one of the sharpest pieces of philosophical argument in 18th-century writing.
3
Virtue is not gendered
In Wollstonecraft's time, women and men were thought to have different virtues. Men were supposed to be courageous, rational, and active. Women were supposed to be gentle, modest, and submissive. Wollstonecraft rejected this entirely. She argued that virtue — genuine moral goodness — is the same for all human beings. There is no separate female virtue that consists of pleasing others and suppressing your own judgement. True virtue requires reason, independence, and the ability to form your own moral conclusions. A woman who is merely obedient is not virtuous — she is simply controlled.
Key Quotations
"It is time to effect a revolution in female manners — time to restore to them their lost dignity — and make them, as a part of the human species, labour by reforming themselves to reform the world."
— A Vindication of the Rights of Woman, 1792
Wollstonecraft is calling for transformation — not just in laws and political rights, but in the way women present themselves and the way they think about themselves. She believed women had partly accepted and reproduced the system of their own subordination — by valuing beauty, by seeking to please, by not demanding to be taken seriously as thinkers and citizens. She was asking women to reject this, not to blame them for it. The phrase reform the world through reforming themselves connects individual change to political change — an idea that would later be central to many liberation movements.
"The being who patiently endures injustice, and silently bears insults, will soon become unjust, or unable to discern right from wrong."
— A Vindication of the Rights of Woman, 1792
This is a profound psychological and moral observation. Wollstonecraft is arguing that accepting injustice is not morally neutral — it damages the person who accepts it. When you learn to endure being treated unfairly without protest, you gradually lose the ability to recognise injustice clearly. Silence in the face of injustice is not simply passive — it has active moral consequences. This connects both to resilience teaching (the importance of not internalising oppression) and to civic education (the importance of speaking up).
"Make women rational creatures and free citizens, and they will quickly become good wives and mothers."
— A Vindication of the Rights of Woman, 1792
This quotation shows both Wollstonecraft's radicalism and her limits. She is arguing that educating women to be rational and free will make them better in their domestic roles — not worse. This was a direct response to those who feared that educating women would destroy family life. But it also reveals that Wollstonecraft still largely accepted that wives and mothers were what women primarily were. Later feminist thinkers would challenge this assumption more directly. The quotation is useful precisely because it shows that even radical thinkers are products of their time and hold contradictions.
Using This Thinker in the Classroom
History / Social Studies When studying the Enlightenment, the French Revolution, or the history of rights
How to introduce
After studying the Enlightenment's claims about reason and rights, introduce Wollstonecraft's challenge: if reason is what makes humans worthy of rights, and women are equally rational, why did the Enlightenment exclude women from its vision of freedom? Ask: is this a contradiction, or did the Enlightenment thinkers have reasons for the exclusion? What were those reasons, and do they hold up? Wollstonecraft's work shows students how political ideas can claim to be universal while actually being much more limited — and how excluded groups have challenged that limitation using the dominant framework's own logic.
Philosophy / Ethics When discussing what makes someone a moral person and whether morality differs by gender
How to introduce
Present Wollstonecraft's argument: virtue is not gendered. There are not separate virtues for men and women. Moral goodness — honesty, courage, justice, compassion — is the same for all human beings, and it requires the capacity to reason and make independent moral judgements. Ask: Do you think men and women are taught to value different things? Do you think that is natural or produced by culture and upbringing? If virtue requires independent reasoning, what follows for how girls and women should be educated?
Resilience / Wellbeing When discussing self-worth, identity, and the pressure of appearance
How to introduce
Introduce Wollstonecraft's observation that when children are taught from infancy that their value lies in their appearance, their minds shape themselves around that belief. Ask: Do you see this happening today? Where do young people — especially girls — receive messages that their appearance matters more than their intelligence or character? What effect does this have? What would Wollstonecraft say about social media and its focus on image? Connect to resilience: building a sense of self-worth that is independent of appearance and the approval of others is something Wollstonecraft was already arguing for in 1792.
Further Reading

A Vindication of the Rights of Woman (1792) is the central text — the introduction and Chapters 1, 2, and 4 are most relevant to education and identity. It is freely available online through Project Gutenberg. A Vindication of the Rights of Men (1790) — written in response to Edmund Burke — shows Wollstonecraft's political thinking in a more direct confrontational mode. Claire Tomalin's biography The Life and Death of Mary Wollstonecraft (1974) is the most readable account of her life. Lyndall Gordon's Vindication: A Life of Mary Wollstonecraft (2005) is more recent and equally strong.

Key Ideas
1
The personal is political — domestic life as a political question
Wollstonecraft was one of the first thinkers to argue that the conditions of domestic and family life are political questions — not just private matters. The way marriage was structured in her time gave husbands almost complete legal control over their wives. Women could not own property, vote, or appear in court independently. Wollstonecraft argued that this was not a natural arrangement but a political one — maintained by law, custom, and above all by education that prepared women to accept subordination as if it were simply the way things were. Changing women's political position required changing all of these things simultaneously, including how children were educated.
2
Wollstonecraft's contradictions and her legacy
Wollstonecraft's work contains real tensions that scholars continue to debate. She argued passionately for women's rational equality but sometimes reproduced class assumptions — her arguments focused primarily on middle-class women and said relatively little about working-class or enslaved women. She also sometimes seemed to accept that motherhood and domestic responsibility were women's primary roles, even while arguing for political rights. Later feminist thinkers — including those in the suffrage movement, and later Simone de Beauvoir and contemporary feminists — have both built on her work and critiqued these limitations. Engaging with these tensions makes her thought more useful, not less.
3
Wollstonecraft and the Enlightenment — using the tools of the oppressor
Wollstonecraft's strategy was to take Enlightenment ideas — reason, rights, individual freedom, progress — completely seriously and apply them consistently, reaching conclusions that the male Enlightenment thinkers had refused to reach. This is an important intellectual move: using the dominant framework's own logic to expose its contradictions and exclusions. It is a strategy that would later be used by many liberation thinkers — including Fanon, who used Enlightenment humanism against colonial dehumanisation, and Frederick Douglass, who used the language of American liberty against slavery. Understanding this strategy helps students see how political arguments work and how excluded groups have historically made their claims.
Key Quotations
"Strengthen the female mind by enlarging it, and there will be an end to blind obedience."
— A Vindication of the Rights of Woman, 1792
Wollstonecraft believed that ignorance and dependence were mutually reinforcing — that keeping women uneducated was the mechanism by which their subordination was maintained. An educated mind can evaluate arguments, recognise injustice, and refuse to simply comply. This is why, she argued, those who benefit from women's subordination had a strong interest in keeping women uneducated. The argument applies beyond gender: any system that depends on the compliance of a group has an interest in limiting that group's access to critical education. This connects directly to Freire's analysis of the banking model of education.
"The conclusion which I wish to draw is obvious: make women moral and citizens, and they will quickly become good wives and mothers — if men do not neglect the duties of husbands and fathers."
— A Vindication of the Rights of Woman, 1792
This later version of her argument adds a critical dimension: Wollstonecraft points out that men's failure to fulfil their own duties in marriage and family is also part of the problem. She is not only asking women to change — she is pointing at the responsibilities of men too. This mutuality is important: genuine equality is not only about what women are allowed to do but about what is expected of everyone in a just society. The argument anticipates later feminist thinking about the distribution of care and domestic labour.
Using This Thinker in the Classroom
Politics / Civic Education When discussing the history of suffrage, rights movements, and political exclusion
How to introduce
Introduce Wollstonecraft's argument that political rights cannot be consistently limited to men if the basis of those rights is human reason — which women possess equally. Trace the consequences: it took more than 125 years after A Vindication was published for women in Britain to gain the right to vote. Ask: Why was such an apparently logical argument resisted for so long? What interests did the exclusion of women serve? What does this tell us about how political change happens — and about the relationship between logical argument and political power?
Education Theory / Teacher Development When teachers are reflecting on whose potential their education system values
How to introduce
Invite teachers to examine their own practice through Wollstonecraft's lens: do you have different expectations of boys and girls in your classroom? Are you more likely to encourage boys towards analytical subjects and girls towards caring or creative ones? Do you respond differently to assertiveness in boys versus girls? These are not accusations — they are questions that any honest educator should ask. Wollstonecraft's argument is that the system of education itself produces the differences it then claims to be simply recognising. What would it mean to teach in a way that resisted this?
Common Misconceptions
Common misconception

Wollstonecraft argued that women and men are identical and that differences between them do not exist.

What to teach instead

Wollstonecraft argued that women and men are equally capable of reason and equally deserving of rights and education — not that they are identical in every way. She was primarily concerned with showing that the intellectual and moral differences between men and women in her time were produced by education and social conditioning, not by nature. Her argument was that given equal education and equal opportunities, women would prove themselves equally capable. Whether there are other, non-socially-produced differences between men and women was not really her focus.

Common misconception

Wollstonecraft rejected marriage and family life.

What to teach instead

Wollstonecraft did not reject marriage or motherhood — she argued for a different kind of marriage, based on rational companionship and mutual respect rather than dependence and control. She believed that educated, independent women would actually be better wives and mothers — not worse. Her own life was complicated: she had a child outside marriage, entered into an informal union that was not legally recognised, and eventually married William Godwin. But her writing consistently argued for the reform of marriage, not its abolition.

Common misconception

Wollstonecraft's arguments are no longer relevant because women now have equal rights.

What to teach instead

Legal equality — the right to vote, to own property, to be educated — is important and is something Wollstonecraft fought for in principle. But legal equality has not produced full social, economic, or psychological equality. Many of Wollstonecraft's core observations remain relevant: the persistent pressure on girls to value appearance over ability; the different expectations placed on boys and girls in education and work; the gap between formal rights and lived reality. Her argument that education shapes what people believe is possible for themselves is as applicable today as it was in 1792.

Common misconception

Wollstonecraft spoke for all women.

What to teach instead

Wollstonecraft's arguments focused primarily on middle-class educated women in Britain and France. She said relatively little about working-class women, enslaved women, or women outside Europe. Her framework assumed that access to rational education was the primary barrier to women's equality — which was more accurate for women of her class than for women facing poverty, racial oppression, or both simultaneously. Later feminist thinkers, particularly Black feminist writers like Sojourner Truth, Audre Lorde, and bell hooks, developed frameworks that addressed the intersections of gender with race and class that Wollstonecraft largely missed.

Intellectual Connections
Influenced By
John Locke
Locke's argument that all human beings are born with the same rational capacity and the same natural rights was foundational to Wollstonecraft's thinking. She took his premises seriously and asked why they did not apply to women — a question Locke himself had not adequately addressed.
Influenced By
Jean-Jacques Rousseau
Rousseau was Wollstonecraft's most important intellectual target as much as he was an influence. She drew on his ideas about natural goodness and the corrupting effects of society, but directly challenged his argument in Emile that women should be educated to be dependent and pleasing. Her critique of Rousseau is one of the most powerful parts of A Vindication.
Influenced By
Richard Price
Price was a Welsh philosopher and a friend and mentor to Wollstonecraft who argued for political reform, religious tolerance, and the rights of citizens. His sermon welcoming the French Revolution provoked Edmund Burke's Reflections on the Revolution in France, to which Wollstonecraft wrote one of the first and sharpest responses — A Vindication of the Rights of Men — before going on to write A Vindication of the Rights of Woman.
Influenced
John Stuart Mill
Mill's The Subjection of Women (1869) developed many of the arguments Wollstonecraft had made, with more systematic philosophical rigour and a wider political context. Mill acknowledged that the question of women's subordination was one of the central injustices of his time — a position Wollstonecraft had pioneered nearly 80 years earlier.
Influenced
Simone de Beauvoir
De Beauvoir's The Second Sex (1949) — the most important feminist philosophical text of the 20th century — extended and deepened Wollstonecraft's core insight: that femininity is not natural but produced. De Beauvoir's famous claim that one is not born a woman but becomes one is an elaboration of the argument Wollstonecraft had made about education and social conditioning in 1792.
Influenced
Virginia Woolf
Woolf wrote about Wollstonecraft with deep respect and complicated admiration, describing her as a woman whose experiments in living were as bold and consequential as her ideas. A Room of One's Own — Woolf's essay on women and writing — continues the argument Wollstonecraft began: that women need material conditions — money, space, time — to be able to think and create freely.
Influenced
bell hooks
bell hooks drew on the tradition Wollstonecraft founded — that education is central to women's liberation — while significantly expanding it to address the intersections of gender with race and class. Her critiques of mainstream feminism for its failure to address the experience of Black and working-class women can be read as continuing the project of applying feminist logic consistently, just as Wollstonecraft applied Enlightenment logic consistently.
Further Reading

The complete texts of both Vindications and her unfinished novel Maria, or the Wrongs of Woman (1798) — which dramatises many of her theoretical arguments through fiction — are essential.

For philosophical engagement

Barbara Taylor's Mary Wollstonecraft and the Feminist Imagination (2003) is the most rigorous recent scholarly treatment. For the relationship between Wollstonecraft and later feminism: Cora Kaplan's essays in Sea Changes (1986).

For intersectional critique

Patricia Hill Collins's Black Feminist Thought and Kimberlé Crenshaw's work on intersectionality provide the frameworks for understanding what Wollstonecraft's analysis missed.

Janet Todd's Mary Wollstonecraft

A Revolutionary Life (2000) is the most comprehensive biography. All of Wollstonecraft's major works are freely available at Project Gutenberg.