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Letters written in Sweden, Norway, and Denmark (Oxford World's Classics)
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Review
This collection brings to life a radical writer. Katie Toms, The Observer
Book Description
These twenty-five letters, published in 1796, describe Mary Wollstonecraft's audacious trip to Scandinavia to retrieve a stolen ship for her lover Imlay. More than just a travelogue, they provide fascinating insights into the radical philosophy of this influential thinker, and the inner turmoil she was experiencing at the time.
--This text refers to an alternate
edition.
download eBook Letters written in Sweden, Norway, and Denmark (Oxford World's Classics) - Mary Wollstonecraft, Jon Mee, Tone Brekke online free pdf mp3 torrent
download 0199230633 9780191567384 book online

08/02/2011
A great book, it puts you in Scandinavia in the late 1800's and you can feel the life.
An excellent company that reproduces out of print books for the public.
Highly recommended for the brain un-dead.

31/03/2010
Mary Wollstonecraft's Scandinavian journey lasted from June to October 1795. This book consists of letters to Gilbert Imlay.
He was the father of her daughter.
The descriptions of Sweden, Norway and Denmark she saw during
this time are exceedingly conclusive and puts the reader there.
Intrigued?
A charming use of the English language {although at times genteel};
nevertheless, poignantly stimulating to a fault telling what she
experienced.
Truly a classic!
Dag Stomberg
St. Andrews, Scotland

06/09/2004
I admit I am biased since I am reading this in an Email group called "18th Century Worlds", which perhaps give me more insight and perception into the world of Mary Wollstonecraft. But my Penguin edition of the book is very good, including as it does both Mary's "Short Residence" and the biography of her - or even if you've never given a damn-- this is an attention-grabbing and engrossing account. Provided you can get over its prose, or approach it open-mindedly (which many easily bored illiterati might not be able to), you will be struck law husband, an American businessman involved in smuggling. She took with her only her young daughter, still a child, and her French maid. "Residence in Sweden" is an account of her journey written in the form of letters to the man she left behind (though this doesn't show up in the text itself, the informative introduction gives the background). Partway into her trip, she leaves her child and the nurse behind and continues on her own to regions remote and picturesque, and foreign not only to most English women of the period, but to the majority of English men as well.
Wollstonecraft goes on philosopical rambles, as the images of social life and the landscape around her remind her of her experiences in revolutionary France. The text raise many questions important to the Enlightenment philosophes, about the role of women, man's place in nature, human habits and manners. Never are we allowed to forget that we are reading the words of a flesh and blood woman who feels deeply. Many of her recollections are painful, and sometimes she is depressed. But there is always something arrestingly beautiful in what she describes, some touch of the author's vivacity and the newness and intensity of her travels, to steer one away from the melancholy, or at least to make it something more sublime.
I'm taking this one with me to college, and I foresee many re-readings. Holmes calls it Mary's best literary work: it has none of the bombast of her "Vindication of the Rights of Woman" but instead is something even more thoughtful and readable.
For companion reading I highly recommend Claire Tomalin's "Life and Death of Mary Wollstonecraft".
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