Memoirs of the Author of a Vindication of the Rights of Woman

audiobook

Memoirs of the Author of a Vindication of the Rights of Woman

by William Godwin

EN·~2 hours·11 chapters

Chapters

11 total
1

MEMOIRS of the AUTHOR of a VINDICATION OF THE RIGHTS OF WOMAN. - By WILLIAM GODWIN.

0:18
2

MEMOIRS. - CHAP. I. - 1759-1775.

13:31
3

CHAP. II - 1775-1783.

8:04
4

CHAP. III. - 1783-1785.

13:18
5

CHAP. IV. - 1785-1787.

9:36
6

CHAP. V. - 1787-1790.

8:36
7

CHAP. VI. - 1790-1792.

20:30
8

CHAP. VII. - 1792-1795.

17:50
9

CHAP. VIII. - 1795, 1796.

19:18
10

CHAP. IX. - 1796, 1797.

19:10

Description

A vivid portrait unfolds of a remarkable woman whose ideas would later shape the fight for gender equality. Drawing on personal recollections and testimonies from those who knew her best, the narrative follows her childhood in a restless household, marked by a father’s volatile temperament and a mother’s strict favoritism toward her elder brother. It sketches the modest, itinerant beginnings that sowed both hardship and resilience, while hinting at the keen intelligence and moral firmness that would define her later work.

The early chapters reveal the formative moments that honed her sensibility—an upbringing far from indulgent affection, yet rich in the challenges that forged her independent spirit. Listeners will gain insight into the family ties that stretched across London, the Irish countryside, and even the Atlantic, as her siblings pursued lives in Paris and America. These foundations set the stage for her emergence as a pioneering voice on women's rights, offering a nuanced glimpse into the making of a thinker whose legacy endures.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~2 hours (144K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by Jonathan Ingram, Melissa Er-Raqabi and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net.

Release date

2005-07-04

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

William Godwin

William Godwin

1756–1836

A bold political thinker and novelist of the Romantic era, he helped shape early debates about freedom, reason, and the rights of the individual. He is best known for An Enquiry Concerning Political Justice and the novel Caleb Williams, works that made him one of the most talked-about writers of the 1790s.

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