1st Edition

Nineteenth-Century Women Philosophers in Britain and America

Edited By Alison Stone, Charlotte Alderwick Copyright 2024

    This book advances the rediscovery of forgotten women philosophers in the nineteenth century who have been unjustly left out of the philosophical canon and omitted from narratives about the history of philosophy.
    Women often did philosophy in a public setting in this period, engaging with practical issues of social concern and using philosophy to make the world a better place. This book highlights some of women’s interventions against slavery, for women’s rights, and on morality, moral agency, and the conditions of a flourishing life. The chapters are on: Mary Shepherd’s idea of life; the collaborative authorships and feminist perspectives of Anna Doyle Wheeler and Harriet Taylor Mill; the roles of Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Lucretia Mott in the American women’s rights movement; the influence of classical German philosophy on Lydia Maria Child’s abolitionism; George Eliot’s understanding of agency; the views of agency and resistance developed by Harriet Tubman and Elizabeth from within the abolitionist tradition; Annie Besant’s search for a metaphysical basis for ethics, which she ultimately found in Hinduism; E. E. Constance Jones on the dualism of practical reason; Marietta Kies on altruism and positive rights; and Anna Julia Cooper’s black feminist conception of the right to growth. The book unearths an important and neglected chapter in the history of women philosophers, showing the variety and vitality of nineteenth-century women’s intellectual lives.
    Nineteenth-Century Women Philosophers in Britain and America will be of great use to students and researchers interested in Philosophy, Women’s Studies, and the politics of gender at the heart of British and American societies. This book was originally published as a special issue of British Journal for the History of Philosophy.

    Introduction
    Alison Stone and Charlotte Alderwick
     
    1. Mary Shepherd and the meaning of ‘life’
    Deborah Boyle
     
    2. “Political…civil and domestic slavery”: Harriet Taylor Mill and Anna Doyle Wheeler on marriage, servitude, and socialism
    Helen McCabe
     
    3. Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Lucretia Mott: radical ‘co-adjutors’ in the American women’s rights movement
    Lisa Pace Vetter
     
    4. Lydia Maria Child on German philosophy and American slavery
    Lydia Moland
     
    5. The fragility of rationality: George Eliot on akrasia and the law of consequences
    Patrick Fessenbecker
     
    6. “Count it all joy”: black women’s interventions in the abolitionist tradition
    Lindsey Stewart
     
    7. “Friendly to all beings”: Annie Besant as ethicist
    Kurt Leland
     
    8. E. E. Constance Jones on the dualism of practical reason
    Gary Ostertag and Amanda Favia
     
    9. Marietta Kies on idealism and good governance
    Dorothy Rogers
     
    10. Race and the ‘right to growth’: embodiment and education in the work of Anna Julia Cooper
    Kevin Cedeño-Pacheco

    Biography

    Alison Stone is Professor of Philosophy at Lancaster University, UK. Her interests span the history of philosophy, post-Kantian European philosophy, feminist philosophy, and aesthetics. Her books include Being Born: Birth and Philosophy (2019), Frances Power Cobbe (2022) and Women Philosophers in Nineteenth-Century Britain (2023).

    Charlotte Alderwick is Senior Lecturer in Philosophy at UWE Bristol. Her monograph Schelling's Ontology of Powers (2021) connects the history of philosophy with contemporary metaphysis; this is indicative of her philosophical approach. Charlotte is now working on Eco-philosophy and the contribution that historical philosophies of nature can make to this area.