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Letters on the Elementary Principles of Education: Volume 1
Paperback

Letters on the Elementary Principles of Education: Volume 1

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The novelist and essayist Elizabeth Hamilton (1756?-1816) received her education at a day school from the age of eight, and later recalled her childhood and schooldays fondly. However, intellectual girls in the period were regarded with some suspicion, and she remembered hiding from visitors those books that might be deemed inappropriate for a young woman. Later embarking on a literary career, she published in 1801 her Letters on Education, republished in this second edition of 1801-2. Owing much to the theories of John Locke as well as the period’s standard conduct-book advice on the education of girls, Hamilton’s work offers detailed theoretical explorations of how children learn. ‘Be not afraid my good friend,’ she writes, ‘that I intend making speculative philosophers of your daughters.’ Volume 1 includes comments on the ‘pernicious effects of parental partiality’, considering also ‘contempt for the female character’ and ‘pride of station’.

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MORE INFO
Format
Paperback
Publisher
Cambridge University Press
Country
United Kingdom
Date
23 January 2014
Pages
448
ISBN
9781108069090

The novelist and essayist Elizabeth Hamilton (1756?-1816) received her education at a day school from the age of eight, and later recalled her childhood and schooldays fondly. However, intellectual girls in the period were regarded with some suspicion, and she remembered hiding from visitors those books that might be deemed inappropriate for a young woman. Later embarking on a literary career, she published in 1801 her Letters on Education, republished in this second edition of 1801-2. Owing much to the theories of John Locke as well as the period’s standard conduct-book advice on the education of girls, Hamilton’s work offers detailed theoretical explorations of how children learn. ‘Be not afraid my good friend,’ she writes, ‘that I intend making speculative philosophers of your daughters.’ Volume 1 includes comments on the ‘pernicious effects of parental partiality’, considering also ‘contempt for the female character’ and ‘pride of station’.

Read More
Format
Paperback
Publisher
Cambridge University Press
Country
United Kingdom
Date
23 January 2014
Pages
448
ISBN
9781108069090