Educating English Daughters – Late Seventeenth–Century Debates
Frances Teague author Margaret J M Ezell author Bathsua Makin author Mary More author
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Arizona Center for Medieval & Renaissance Studies,US
Published:11th Apr '16
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

This edition offers texts from Bathsua Makin and Mary More, and Robert Whitehall’s response to More’s argument. Makin describes the appropriate education for London merchants’ daughters, arguing that girls should be educated and should aspire to follow learned women in history, and that educated women improve their families and themselves. More argues that women have the right to an education, and that such an education shows that the inequality of married women under English law is a man-made institution. More’s argument drew objections from her Oxford reader, Robert Whitehall, who preserved her manuscript with his own. Makin and More enjoyed a measure of public recognition and esteem, yet after their deaths, they and their texts were largely ignored until the late twentieth century.
Mary More and Bathsua Makin wrote essays on female education that circulated in manuscript and print in the seventeenth century. This edition, lightly modernized and with substantial, rigorous introductions and useful notes, makes these two important texts — and a third by Robert Whitehall written in response to More — more accessible to contemporary readers. The volume is compelling reading and will be an important resource for those interested in the seventeenth-century querelle des femmes, women’s education, humanist learning, and the history of feminist thought.
Edith Snook
Professor of English, University of New Brunswick
ISBN: 9780866985468
Dimensions: 236mm x 154mm x 13mm
Weight: 366g
202 pages