I am not sure if I had trouble truly understanding them, or maybe it's that they just didn't sink in, but I felt as if the passages were very repetitive. Don't get me wrong, Wollstonecraft had very good content and strong points, but I felt as if she restated everything from different perspectives throughout these first four chapters. Its almost as if she didn't add any new or fresh input after the first one or two chapters. Now, this may be a lack of understanding on my part, or maybe I just wasn't intrigued enough to gain a more comprehensive grasp of the subject, but I just felt as as if Wollstonecraft was beating a horse she had already killed. However, this does not discredit the fact that she has made some very nice points in her righting. In that time, women were raised to feel, act, and think inferior to men, but that doesn't mean that they couldn't be on the same playing field in these areas. I did appreciate that she did not blame the condition of women at the time completely on the men, and by that I mean she did place some responsibility in the complacency of women at the time. Did anyone else have these kind of thoughts or ideas about the subject?
P.S. I commented on Gray's and Anna Kate's posts.
P.S. I commented on Gray's and Anna Kate's posts.
Comments
In an era when women practically had zero rights, I feel as though Wollstonecraft's repetition was just her form of determination and her zeal for change. By constantly bringing up the same topics over and over again, she was pounding her information into the heads of her readers, insuring her words would not be forgotten.