Dear readers, I have succumbed to some kind of late-Spring bug, and getting any new writing done this week has proved impossible. So instead, I thought I would re-share with you a book review from earlier this month which came out in Current, in case you missed it. In it, I discuss two recent books which both attempt to recover Mary Wollstonecraft as a thinker deeply interested in the life of the virtues:
Ooh I will have to check these books out! I LOVED Erika Bachiochi’s The Rights of Women, I hadn’t read any Wollstonecraft since my undergraduate days and had totally forgotten (or never really understood) how much her case for rights rests upon the idea of virtue and responsibilities.
Ooh I will have to check these books out! I LOVED Erika Bachiochi’s The Rights of Women, I hadn’t read any Wollstonecraft since my undergraduate days and had totally forgotten (or never really understood) how much her case for rights rests upon the idea of virtue and responsibilities.