Wollstonecraft does not just attack Burke's politics; she critiques his "rhetoric of sensibility". A Vindication of the Rights of Men by Mary Wollstonecraft
Wollstonecraft uses "A Vindication of the Rights of Men" to dismantle Burke’s defense of the monarchy and aristocracy. Her review focuses on three main pillars: A Vindication of the Rights of Men A Vindicatio...
: Wollstonecraft indicts the British class system, arguing that hereditary property and titles stifle virtue and ignore the suffering of the poor. She famously mocks Burke’s sentimentalism toward Marie Antoinette, contrasting it with his lack of empathy for the common people. Wollstonecraft does not just attack Burke's politics; she
: She rejects Burke’s reliance on "custom" and "prescription". She argues that rights are inalienable and based on reason, not on historical inheritance or the preservation of ancient institutions. : She advocates for a society where merit,
: She advocates for a society where merit, rather than birthright, determines one's status, and supports the democratic principles of the French Revolution. Critique of Language and Style
Published in 1790, is Mary Wollstonecraft's sharp, immediate response to Edmund Burke’s Reflections on the Revolution in France . While often overshadowed by her later work on women's rights, this pamphlet established her as a formidable political philosopher during the "Revolution Controversy". Core Arguments & Themes
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Wollstonecraft does not just attack Burke's politics; she critiques his "rhetoric of sensibility". A Vindication of the Rights of Men by Mary Wollstonecraft
Wollstonecraft uses "A Vindication of the Rights of Men" to dismantle Burke’s defense of the monarchy and aristocracy. Her review focuses on three main pillars:
: Wollstonecraft indicts the British class system, arguing that hereditary property and titles stifle virtue and ignore the suffering of the poor. She famously mocks Burke’s sentimentalism toward Marie Antoinette, contrasting it with his lack of empathy for the common people.
: She rejects Burke’s reliance on "custom" and "prescription". She argues that rights are inalienable and based on reason, not on historical inheritance or the preservation of ancient institutions.
: She advocates for a society where merit, rather than birthright, determines one's status, and supports the democratic principles of the French Revolution. Critique of Language and Style
Published in 1790, is Mary Wollstonecraft's sharp, immediate response to Edmund Burke’s Reflections on the Revolution in France . While often overshadowed by her later work on women's rights, this pamphlet established her as a formidable political philosopher during the "Revolution Controversy". Core Arguments & Themes