Woman in the Nineteenth Century (1845) is considered the first major work of feminism in the United States. It was originally published in shorter form in The Dial magazine, titled The Great Lawsuit. Man versus Men. Woman versus Women in July, 1843. The book is subtitled, Kindred Papers Relating to the Sphere, Condition and Duties, of Woman. In it, Fuller examined the differences between men and women and advocated for women's need to have their educational and spiritual resources strengthened ("Educate Men and Women as Souls" is one of her chapters). "There is no wholly masculine man, no purely feminine woman." She concluded that both sexes share feminine and masculine qualities and that the differences lie in the individual. The Introduction is written by Horace Greeley, Fuller's editor who sent her to Europe as The New York Tribune's first female correspondent, who praised Fuller as "one of the earliest as well as ablest among American women, to demand for her sex equality...Her writings on this subject have the force which springs from the ripening of profound reflection into assured conviction."
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Introduction by Horace Greeley
Part I - Woman in the Nineteenth Century
Part II - Miscellanies - Aglauron and Laurie
The Wrongs of American Women. The Duties of American Women.
From a Criticism on "Consuelo"
Jenny Lind, the "Consuelo" of George Sand
Review of "Memoirs and Essays of Mrs. Jameson"
Woman's Influence Over the Insane
From a Criticism on Browning's Poems
Educate Men and Women as Souls
Part III - Extracts from Journals and Letters
To Mazzini and To Mr. and Mrs. Spring