Asked by dontdelay
True or False?
In "Rights of Women," Anna Letitia Barbauld concludes that women will be far less satisfied in fighting for their "rights" against men (as Wollstonecraft did) then with acting in love toward men, as Nature created them to do.
In "Rights of Women," Anna Letitia Barbauld concludes that women will be far less satisfied in fighting for their "rights" against men (as Wollstonecraft did) then with acting in love toward men, as Nature created them to do.
Answers
Answered by
Writeacher
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Answered by
ticherry
false
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