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Mill on the Subjection of Women

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Liberty Fund Staff

Liberty Fund, Inc., Indianapolis, Indiana

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John Stuart Mill (1806-73) was one of the most important classical liberals of the 19th century and one of the most important political philosophers of all time. On Liberty is one of the foundation texts of 19th century classical liberalism and was published in 1859 shortly after his lover and then wife, Harriet Taylor (1807-1858), died and after he had retired from the East India Company. The Subjection of Women was a very controversial book at the time it appeared but eventually became one of the foundation texts of the feminist movement. It was written in 1861 (with significant collaboration from Harriet Taylor) but was not published until 1869 when Mill had retired to the south of France and only some 4 years before his death. To explore the connections between the two works this reading list should be read in conjunction with the similar one for On Liberty. Shortly after his death in 1873 a volume containing both On Liberty and The Subjection of Women was published in 1874. The OLL has a reprint of this edition which was published in 1879.

Mill has a couple of comments in his Autobiography ( 1873) on how he came to write The Subjection of Women:

The other treatise written at this time is the one which was published some years later under the title of The Subjection of Women. It was written at my daughter’s suggestion that there might, in any event, be in existence a written exposition of my opinions on that great question, as full and conclusive as I could make it. The intention was to keep this among other unpublished papers, improving it from time to time if I was able, and to publish it at the time when it should seem likely to be most useful. As ultimately published it was enriched with some important ideas of my daughter’s, and passages of her writing. But in what was of my own composition, all that is most striking and profound belongs to my wife; coming from the fund of thought which had been made common to us both, by our innumerable conversations and discussions on a topic which filled so large a place in our minds.

His second reflection from the Autobiography concerns the influence of Harriet Taylor on his thinking about women:

The steps in my mental growth for which I was indebted to her were far from being those which a person wholly uninformed on the subject would probably suspect. It might be supposed, for instance, that my strong convictions on the complete equality in all legal, political, social and domestic relations, which ought to exist between men and women, may have been adopted or learnt from her. This was so far from being the fact, that those convictions were among the earliest results of the application of my mind to political subjects, and the strength with which I held them was, as I believe, more than anything else, the originating cause of the interest she felt in me. What is true is, that until I knew her, the opinion was, in my mind, little more than an abstract principle. I saw no more reason why women should be held in legal subjection to other people, than why men should. I was certain that their interests required fully as much protection as those of men, and were quite as little likely to obtain it without an equal voice in making the laws by which they are to be bound. But that perception of the vast practical bearings of women’s disabilities which found expression in the book on The Subjection of Women [London: Longmans, Green, Reader, and Dyer, 1869], was acquired mainly through her teaching. But for her rare knowledge of human nature and comprehension of moral and social influences, though I should doubtless have held my present opinions I should have had a very insufficient perception of the mode in which the consequences of the inferior position of women intertwine themselves with all the evils of existing society and with all the difficulties of human improvement. I am indeed painfully conscious how much of her best thoughts on the subject I have failed to reproduce, and how greatly that little treatise falls short of what would have been given to the world if she had put on paper her entire mind on this question, or had lived to revise and improve, as she certainly would have done, my imperfect statement of the case.

In this reading list I want to explore some of the key ideas which Mill developed in The Subjection of Women. For additional reading please see the following:

The OLL’s holding of books by John Stuart Mill. Essays in the Forum on Mill. The OLL has two versions of Mill’s essay on The Subjection of Women: an edition from 1879 which contains both On Liberty and The Subjection of Women; and the authoritative University of Toronto Press edition of The Subjection of Women. The work of Harriet Taylor on the Enfranchisement of Women (1851).