|
Showing 1 - 4 of
4 matches in All Departments
John Stuart Mill's The Subjection of Women is a landmark work both
in the long history of women's struggles for political, legal,
economic, and personal equality, and in the shorter history of
rigorous intellectual analyses of women's subordination. One of the
lasting legacies of Mill's The Subjection of Women is its careful
argument for the need for justice at both the 'public' and the
'private' levels, which requires changes at the domestic level that
are as radical in the 21st century as they were in the 19th. The
essays collected in this critical edition represent a variety of
interpretations both of the kind of feminism Mill represents and of
the specific arguments he offers in The Subjection of Women
including their lexical ordering and relative merit. Each selection
is preceded by a brief and useful summary of the author's position,
intended to assist readers encountering the material for the first
time
John Stuart Mill's The Subjection of Women is a landmark work both
in the long history of women's struggles for political, legal,
economic, and personal equality, and in the shorter history of
rigorous intellectual analyses of women's subordination. One of the
lasting legacies of Mill's The Subjection of Women is its careful
argument for the need for justice at both the "public" and the
"private" levels, which requires changes at the domestic level that
are as radical in the 21st century as they were in the 19th. The
essays collected in this critical edition represent a variety of
interpretations both of the kind of feminism Mill represents and of
the specific arguments he offers in The Subjection of Women
including their lexical ordering and relative merit. Each selection
is preceded by a brief and useful summary of the author's position,
intended to assist readers encountering the material for the first
time
Wendy Donner contends here that recent commentators on John Stuart
Mill's thought have focused on his notions of right and obligation
and have not paid as much attention to his notion of the good.
Mill, she maintains, rejects the quantitative hedonism of Bentham's
philosophy in favor of an expanded qualitative version. In this
book she provides an account of his complex views of the good and
the ways in which these views unify his moral and political
thought.
|
|