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Domesticity, objects and idleness: Mary Wollstonecraft and political economy
In 1792, the Analytical Review categorised Mary Wollstonecraft's Vindication of the Rights of Woman as a work of political economy: as a contribution to a discourse whose aims, methods and directions were much contested at the time. This paper argues that the preoccupation with the objects and “manners” of domesticity across Wollstonecraft's writings provide a means of exploring her engagement with what she welcomed as the emergent “science of politics and finance”. It shows how political economy itself “begins at home”, by theorising the drive to acquisition which structures the relations between people and the objects with which they surround themselves, at home and beyond. The attempt in Wollstonecraft's Vindication to challenge the construction of Woman as object, to rethink gender and object relations, and to theorise a domestic revolution, is thus deeply involved in the critique of the larger culture of property newly consolidated in Smithian political economy. Her Short Residence in Sweden, Norway and Denmark, meanwhile, continues a preoccupation with modes and styles of domesticity, to find in taste—a principle potentially polished “at home”—a means of engaging political economy more fully.
History
Publication status
- Published
Journal
Women's WritingISSN
0969-9082Publisher
Taylor & FrancisExternal DOI
Issue
4Volume
19Page range
544-562Department affiliated with
- English Publications
Notes
Online First ArticleFull text available
- No
Peer reviewed?
- Yes