Fanny Wright: Rebel in America

Front Cover
University of Illinois Press, 1984 - Biography & Autobiography - 337 pages
Frances Wright dared to take Thomas Jefferson seriously when he wrote, ' All men are created equal, ' and to assume that 'men' meant 'women' as well. Born in Scotland in 1795, she came to the United States in 1818, and spent half her adult life here, she died in Ohio in 1852, ending a lifetime devoted to promoting equality among the races and the sexes. The Marquis de Lafayette called her his adored Fanny and paid court so openly that he scandalized even his own family. The first woman to act publicly to oppose slavery. The pampered daughter of a highly stratified class society, she cast her lot with the working people, risking her health, her fortune, and her good name to realize the promise of the Declaration of Independence. With a boldness rare in women of her day, she attacked in print and in lecture halls throughout the country an economic system that allowed not only black slavery in the South but what she called wage slavery in the North. With the exception perhaps of Walt Whitman, she wrote more powerfully of sexual experience than any other American the nineteenth century.
 

Contents

Jane Austen and the Rebel
1
Every Farmer a Cincinnatus 25
25
The Reckless Disciple
49
The Lady Unattended by a Male Protector
78
Nashoba and New Harmony
108
Cooperation Has Well Nigh Killed Us All
141
The LatterDay Saint Theresa
168
Her Wisdom and Her Folly
207
Mixing with None but French Society
225
The Woman Everybody Abuses
242
The Last Drops of Bitterness
274
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