Mary Wollstonecraft's literary life exemplifies how many women of
that time adopted print culture to bring about change. This study
argues that Protestant society had traditionally sanctioned women's
role in spreading literacy, but this became politicized in the
1790s. Wollstonecraft's literary vocation was shaped by the high
expectations of the power of print to educate and reform
individuals and society, in the radical circles of the Unitarian
publisher Joseph Johnson, and the Girondins in revolutionary
Paris.
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