Gender and Education
Volume 1, Issue 1, Jan 1989
Pages 35-50
- DOI: 10.1080/0954025890010104
- Print ISSN: 0954-0253
- Online ISSN: 1360-0516
Knowledge is Power—Unitarians, gender and education in the eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries
- By
- Ruth Watts
John Taylor High School, Barton‐under‐Needwood
ABSTRACT
This article attempts to show the importance of education to gender equality in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries, and in particular, the relevance of the progressive views and practice of the Unitarians whose attitudes affected women generally both through their educational endeavours, especially in higher education, and through their pioneering efforts on women's rights. There were a number of limitations, however, to the Unitarians’ contribution, not least their paternalistic attitudes to the working class coupled with their genuine upholding of the status and responsibility of motherhood which led them to restrict working‐class women's role in practice even whilst promoting for them a better and wider education. Nevertheless, Unitarians made an outstanding early contribution to gender equality by seeking to provide women with the education which would enable them to develop their full potential and prove their equality.{ label (or @symbol) needed for fn[@id='footnote1'] }