This
paper focuses on
author Mary Wollstonecraft's works of
writing as well as her repeated feminist affirmations that both sexes have the same intellectual and moral capacity which, in the 18th century, was
considered a radical point of view. The
writer explores Wollstonecraft's famous feminist treatise "A Vindication of the Rights of Woman" which was a sequel to her previous book "Vindication of the Rights of Men." This paper also
discusses the author's private life. Wollstonecraft considered herself a moralist who totally believed in the institution of
marriage. The writer of this paper discusses the contrast between her enthusiastic defense of chastity in her writing and her subsequent relationship which produced her daughter Fanny without the benefit of marriage, which created a furor after her death.
More summaries about the Love, Marriage and Mary Wollstonecraft