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Wet-Nursing and Political Participation
[chapter]
2016
The Social and Political Philosophy of Mary Wollstonecraft
Caring duties, which fall particularly to women, are not always compatible with the degree of public life that republican citizenship requires. This is sometimes held as a feminist objection to republicanism. This chapter addresses this objection by focusing on the case of the mothering of infants and wet-nursing in the writings of Wollstonecraft and de Grouchy, two feminist writers of the Enlightenment period. It argues that both writers believe that mothering is central to the development of
doi:10.1093/acprof:oso/9780198766841.003.0012
fatcat:ht7ziopa6jeyrjaug6fgo2me74