We found a match
Your institution may have access to this item. Find your institution then sign in to continue.
- Title
Nancy Kingsbury Wollstonecraft and the Logic of Freedom as Independence.
- Authors
Coffee, Alan
- Abstract
When the writings of Nancy Kingsbury Wollstonecraft surfaced in 2019, having been almost wholly neglected by scholars since their publication in the 1820s, they invited an inevitable and tantalizing comparison with her far more famous sister-in-law, Mary Wollstonecraft, especially since Kingsbury had written an article on "The Natural Rights of Woman." Irrespective of the Wollstonecraft connection, however, Kingsbury's writing stands on its own merits as deserving of serious scholarship by historians of women in philosophy. Nevertheless, reading Kingsbury in the light of her predecessor is highly instructive and helps both bring out what is distinctive about her conclusions and place her in the context of post-Wollstonecraftian thought in the nineteenth century. Kingsbury draws on a similar set of foundational principles as Wollstonecraft, which I place within the republican tradition of political philosophy—freedom, equality, virtue, the common good. Together, these make up an ideal of freedom as independence. Focusing on the issue of education, she argues that increasing women's access to education will do little to improve their intellectual development unless there is an accompanying and extensive restructuring of social and economic norms. In applying the logic of freedom as independence, Kingsbury takes further this aspect of Wollstonecraft's thought and anticipates and prefigures some of the later arguments of feminists and abolitionists writing in the same tradition, including especially Frederick Douglass.
- Subjects
DOUGLASS, Frederick, 1818-1895; WOLLSTONECRAFT, Mary, 1759-1797; WOMEN historians; INTELLECTUAL development; LIBERTY; TRADITION (Philosophy); POLITICAL philosophy; VIRTUE
- Publication
Journal of the History of Philosophy, 2023, Vol 61, Issue 2, p257
- ISSN
0022-5053
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1353/hph.2023.0021