Contents
Introduction: Mary Wollstonecraft and Eighteenth-Century Political Economy
2The Engagement with Burke: Contesting the ‘Natural Course of Things’
3Property, Passions, and Manners: Political Economy and the Vindications
4Political Economy in Revolution: France, Free Commerce, and Wollstonecraft’s History of the French Revolution
5Property in Political Economy: Modernity, Individuation, and Literary Form
6Credit and Credulity: Political Economy, Gender, and the Sentiments in The Wrongs of Woman