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Modern societies are plagued with conflicts about basic beliefs,
values, and ideals. What some call virtue, others count as vice.
This book argues that the cultivation of the virtues as well as
contestation about them are part and parcel of the goods that
Christians and democratic societies share in common. Drawing on the
work of Mary Wollstonecraft, Emily Dumler-Winckler aims to dissolve
the anxieties of both defenders and despisers of virtue ethics and
so form a rapprochement. Influenced by religious dissenters in
eighteenth-century England, Wollstonecraft revolutionized ancient
traditions of the virtues in modern ways for feminist and
abolitionist aims. For this modern feminist, as for premodern
Christians, moral formation requires putting exemplars to the test
of critical examination-discarding some, adopting others, and
emulating the virtues of each. By elaborating the specifically
theological aspects of Wollstonecraft's account, this book
demonstrates the important role religious traditions have played in
feminism and radical socio-political movements in the modern era.
By treating the relation between modern rights and virtues such as
justice and friendship, Dumler-Winckler illuminates their vital
relation and roles in modern democratic societies. With good
reason, both modernity and virtue have cultured despisers. Modern
Virtue provides an account of the virtues in modernity and, even,
the virtues of modernity.
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