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Essays, articles, and papers
All papers in this section ©2002 Franni Vincent : they are here for your information, and I'm happy to discuss the ideas & content -contact me at franni@cantab.net .However, do remember that some have been available on the web since my time at Cambridge University: before you're tempted to use whole paragraphs from them, remember your tutor's probably already read them... |
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Essay:A comparison of the views of Mary Wollstonecraft and Frederick Engels on the position of women in society and how it might be changed.© 1996 Franni Vincent
Wollstonecraft and Engels were writing
almost a hundred years apart, yet the position of women
had probably changed very little. There are similarities
in the social conditions, similarities in their own class
positions of both writers
Taking Wollstonecraft first, her premise was that the natural state of both males and females in infancy was one in which the intelligence had to be developed, drawn out. There was no reason why, given the same treatment as boys, girls should not develop their intellects, but at the end of the C18 barriers existed to ensure that from their birth, women were trained to be weaker in strength in both body and mind. While the Rights of Man were being championed by such as Paine and Rousseau, Wollstonecraft saw the 'natural' position of woman as inferior being repeated. Women were seen as unfit for the duties and obligations of citizenship, their only purpose in life, in Rousseau's view, to please males. The training girl children received at home, or in schools for 'ladies' were, in Wollstonecraft's view, aimed at producing a deformation of femininity.
Women had been created by the society they lived in to
be the 'sweeter companion of men' as Rousseau had decreed
Wollstonecraft, although writing in response and as a reaction to Rousseau, was not claiming that women's inferior position was brought about entirely by men; the family had played a large part, and the goals which women set themselves. Mothers must take their share of blame for the process, having perpetuated the system whereby girls are Taught from their infancy that beauty is woman's sceptre, the mind shapes itself to the body, and roaming round its gilt cage, only seeks to adore its prison. The hypocrisy of societal values, of virtue, chastity are set by Wollstonecraft against the means women were 'trained' to use to get their goal. The need to replicate a society where docility and cunning are rewarded by husbands gives no obvious route to emancipation. This results in complicity of mothers, the complicity within the family which results in exploitation. The marriages among the bourgeoisie were held up as examples of passion leading from first disillusionment to adultery on both sides, the men with the ubiquitous prostitutes, the women with lovers and rakes. She offers no explanation or arguments about how this version of marriage originated, formulates no myths, but simply gives a description of what is. The description is, essentially ahistorical, probably as true a description of wives in the 1950s as in her own century.
Wollstonecraft argues throughout that women should be
made equal, because they are essentially the same as men.
She is agreeing with Mary Astell's comments of fifty years
before, in that women's souls are worth as much as men's
We can view Wollstonecraft's descriptions as the harm wrought by society on woman's personality; while acknowledging that she is addressing her hopes toward middle class women. She only in passing alludes to the greater hardship suffered by the mass of women but has as her end goal that all would be raised sufficiently above abject poverty not to be obliged
to weigh the consequence of every farthing they spend...which
narrows both heart and mind. Unfortunately, she sees this being accomplished with
the aid of 'merely a servant-maid to take off her hands'
any too distasteful domestic tasks. Let woman share the rights, and she will emulate the
virtues of man; for she must grow more perfect when emancipated Emancipation, she saw was in the gift of men, rather
than something women might seize for themselves. Asserting
that women would still be 'dutiful wives', more faithful
than before 'if men but generously snap our chains'
Engels explanation of women's position tends towards the macro. He looked at the position of the family, women's place in it, and the effect this has on society. He sees the bourgeois family, (as does Wollstonecraft), as a less than ideal institution, but his main objection is to the exploitative relationships of the wider capitalist society that are reflected within it. Whereas Wollstonecraft does not theorise on the origins of the deformation of woman's character, but gives sufficient examples to convince us that this is not only her reality, but our mother's too (and if we choose not to heed the warning, our own) Engels gives us chapter upon chapter of justification for how this exploitation has come about.
Engels takes as the starting point a supposedly former, pre-industrial familial existence where women had some sort of equality. If we start by examining the Communist Manifesto's explanation of that The bourgeoisie, wherever it has got the upper hand,
has put an end to all feudal, patriarchal , idyllic relations we have the first indication of this mythical 'idyllic'
life that Engels later describes in The Origin of the
Family, Private Property and the State. Engels assumption
is that the original human relationships were based primitive
collectives, with no personal property, the only production
carried out for 'direct consumption'
Once some property had come into being, marking the first
transition from 'savagery' to 'barbarism'
Engels theory is that before the advent of the exploitative
class relations of capitalism, woman's position within
the family was valued for her labour power; men and women
would have worked together, either in food production,
or the small scale industrial production carried on in
the home. created an impulse to exploit this strengthened position in order to overthrow, in favour of his children, the traditional [matriarchal] order of inheritance´´ The change from 'mother right' to 'father right' marks,
for Engels 'the world historic defeat of the female sex' the peculiar character of the supremacy of the husband
over the wife in the modern family... will only be seen
in the clear light of day when both possess legally complete
equality or rights.
There is, perhaps, little point in taking issue with
the 'myth' of 'Mutterecht', which Engels had perhaps swallowed
whole from contemporary accounts.
Wollstonecraft gives us no comparable explanation as to how the contemporary position of woman had arisen, but she and Engels at this point have a comparable scenario of exploitation. For Wollstonecraft, it is the grinding poverty of the females of the poorer classes which is to be pitied; Engels, however sees the females of the proletariat as less exploited in comparison. Bourgeois marriage is, for him, the mirror of the exploitation rife in society as a whole where prosperity and development for some is won through the
misery and frustration of others. Both are in agreement about property causing some of the problem: From the respect paid to property flow, as from a poisoned
fountain, most of the evils and vices which render this
world such a dreary scene to the contemplative mind Both agree that the state of so called monogamous marriage
is the site of hypocrisy. Engels cites the 'hetaerism'
of the average bourgeois male, Wollstonecraft the differing
values advocated for both sexes, chastity prized by women
while despised by men 'and the two extremes are equally
destructive to morality'
Wollstonecraft's suggestion that men ought to maintain the women whom they have seduced...
stopping an abuse that has an equally fatal effect on
population and morals is possibly a more realistic suggestion to alleviate the exploitation of the women concerned than any idealistic hope that Engels puts forward. Wollstonecraft expresses the 'wild wish' that it would only be in love that there would be any distinction between the sexes; she does, however seemingly accept the possibility that a few women might chose to avoid marriage altogether once equality has been achieved. Engels seems to believe that once the magic wand of equality in the sphere of production has been waved over woman, she would still chose to participate in for monogamous marriage. Given that private housekeeping is transformed into a social industry why should any women choose to 'give' themselves ...the woman was degraded and reduced to servitude: she
became the slave of his lust and a mere instrument for
the production of children be transformed by mere revolution in the public sphere? Engels is unable to see the possible consequences of his feeling that , after the revolution women in particular ...will make their own practice and their corresponding
public opinion about the practice of each individual -
and that will be the end of it That they have chosen to carry on participating in 'families'
for so long is fortunate for men. Wollstonecraft foresaw
that women might choose not to marry, that they might
'escape...from servitude'.
Education is obviously a necessary step towards transforming the relationship between the sexes. Although Engels and Marx in the Communist Manifesto echoed Wollstonecraft's view that education should be carried out in a social context, rather than either in the home or boarding schools, they do not emphasise its importance. it would be the main step needed on the road to emancipation as Wollstonecraft saw it. Equality in education has been far longer in coming than Engels solution of women's participation in production. If they were both right, and the interaction of the differential education plus the restriction of their opportunity to participate in production were at the root of women's subordinate position, then the women in 1990s Britain would be showing more evidence of their equality.... After all, the Equal Opportunities Commission has been in place since the early 1970s, we have legislated for equality, why therefore is there still the feeling that Wollstonecraft's 'wild wish' has not yet come about?
Possibly the answer is twofold: the majority of women
alive have had the education Wollstonecraft described.
They were given enough education to enable them to work
at a job long enough to catch their meal ticket, or the
first of a series of husbands... We can look at work in
the sociology of education in the late 1970s, early 1980s
(Glenys Lobban, Sara Delamont, Dale Spender, Michelle
Stanworth ) to see that even if lip service was paid to
equality, the scales were still even then weighed against
girls gaining the same education as boys, even within
the same school, the same classroom, or sitting next to
each other at the same desk. Attitudes and expectations
about what girls could and would want to achieve persisted.
A similar situation persisted in the working environment:
women participate in the workforce, but still in the West
mainly in separate types of jobs
We could look at their respective writings, conclude
their solutions have been tried and have both failed.
On that dismal note, is there any point in looking at
the different explanations both offered?
© 1996 Franni Vincent
BibliographyF Engels The Origin of the Family, Private Property and the State. (1972 edition) Lawrence & Wishart M Wollstonecraft A Vindication of the Rights of Woman (penguin ed 1975) (ed) Mary Evans The Woman Question: readings on the subordination of women. (1982) Barbara Taylor 'Mary Wollstonecraft & the Wild Wish of Early Feminism' in History Workshop Journal No 33 |
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Footnotes
Engels' income during Marx's exile in England 'does not appear to have exceeded £100 , with which, as his father's representative, he had to keep up a respectable establishment' Isiah Berlin Karl Marx p144 back to textEngels' income during Marx's exile in England 'does not appear to have exceeded £100 , with which, as his father's representative, he had to keep up a respectable establishment' Isiah Berlin Karl Marx p144 back to textibid. p266 back to text
Introduction to Mary Wollstonecraft A Vindication of the Rights of Woman p32 back to text
Wollstonecraft p260(penguin ed.)
back to text
ibid. p260 back to text
Mary Wollstonecraft A Vindication of the Rights of Woman p319(pelican ed.)
back to textibid. p269 (penguin ed.)
back to textMarx & Engels Communist Manifesto p35
back to textEngels The Origin of the Family, Private Property and the State. p233
back to text
ie other than kinship terms imperfectly understood: intergenerational 'respect' terms as in current Hindi, rather than evidence of former sexual linkages?
back to text
ibid. p138
back to text
ibid. p29
back to text
ibid. p119
back to text
ibid. p120 [thus endeth the myth??]
back to text
ibid. p137
back to text
ibid. p 79 - Bachofenns (1861), or the early anthropological works such as LH Morgan(1871)
back to textibid. p129
back to textibid. p129
back to text
Wollstonecraft p257(penguin ed.)
back to textWollstonecraft p 252 (pelican ed.)
back to textibid. p255 (pelican ed.) back to textEngels p145 back to textEngels p121
back to textibid.
back to text
Wollstonecraft p267
back to text
Firestone Dialectic of Sex back to textwhether clustered in separate industries, or in mainly part-time employment in 'male' industries.
back to text
Oakley Subject Women [1981] - p4 back to text
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