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  1. This edition offers texts from Bathsua Makin and Mary More, and Robert Whitehall’s response to More’s argument. Makin describes the appropriate education for London merchants’ daughters, arguing that girls should be educated and should aspire to follow learned women in history, and that educated women improve their families and themselves. More argues that women have the right to an ...

  2. Bathsua Makin ( Stepney, a prop de Londres, c. 1600 - Londres, c. 1675) fou una acadèmica i professora anglesa. Fou la primera dona anglesa a escriure un tractat sobre el dret de les dones a l' educació. El seu pare, Henry Reginald, va dirigir una escola a Londres, on Bathsua va passar els seus primers anys, tant com a alumna com com a ...

  3. Bathsua Makin and Mary More with a Reply to More by Robert Whitehall: Educating English Daughters: Late Seventeenth-Century Debates. Frances N. Teague and Margaret J. M. Ezell, eds. With Jessica Walker. The Other Voice in Early Modern Europe: The Toronto Series 44; Medieval and Renaissance Texts and Studies 491. Toronto: Iter Academic Press; Tempe: Arizona Center for Medieval and Renaissance ...

  4. Gentlewomen, Bathsua Makin (c. 1600–1675) declares that “learning perfects and adorns the soul, which all creatures aim at.” She then poses a reasonable question, “Why should we not by instruction endeavor to repair that which shall be perfectedinheaven?”(Makin1673,24).Afterall, women had minds and souls that were “nothing

  5. 29 de may. de 2009 · This essay examines the writings of women’s education advocate Bathsua Makin (1608-1675) in an effort to determine to what extent they were the product of traditional print debates about women and to what extent they were the innovative foundation for the ideas of Mary Astell (1668-1731), whose efforts on behalf of women have been deemed feminist by twentieth-century scholars.

  6. Bathsua Reginald Makin (/ˈmækɪn/; c. 1600 – c. 1675) was a teacher who contributed to the emerging criticism of woman's position in the domestic and public spheres in 17th-century England. Herself a highly educated woman, Makin was referred to as England's most learned lady, skilled in Greek, Latin, Hebrew, German, Spanish, French and Italian. Makin argued primarily for the equal right of ...

  7. Gentlewomen, Bathsua Makin (née Reynolds) (c. 1600–1675) declares that “learning perfects and adorns the soul, which all creatures aim at.” She then poses a reasonable question, “Why should we not by instruction endeavor to repair that which shall be perfected in heaven?” (Makin 1673, 24). After all, women had minds and souls