
In her short life, Margaret Fuller, whose thoughts and writings inspired leaders
of the women's movement, was a literary critic, free thinker, Transcendentalist
leader, editor, teacher and women's rights author.
Fuller, well-educated and driven by boundless intellectual curiosity, was
captivated by the Transcendentalist movement in New England, and became a
colleague of Emerson, Bronson Alcott and other movement leaders while she
taught. She became the editor of The Dial, the Transcendental journal, and
advocated the philosophy of liberation and fulfillment of the highest potential
of all human beings -- including women. From 1839 to 1844 she held her series of
"Conversations" for women in Boston, encouraging women to think and talk
together about ideas. These dialogues led Fuller to write her most important
work, Women in the Nineteenth Century (1845), considered a classic work of
American feminist thought that had a profound influence on the Seneca Falls
Women's Rights gathering in 1848. The book's message was that women must fulfill
themselves as individuals, not subordinates to men. She wrote, "We would have
every arbitrary barrier thrown down. We would have every path laid open to woman
as freely as to man....then and then only will mankind be ripe for this, when
inward and outward freedom for woman as much as for man shall be acknowledged as
a right, not yielded as a concession."
Fuller was recruited by publisher Horace Greeley in 1844 to become the literary
critic for his New York Tribune, and in 1846-47 she traveled as a foreign
correspondent in Europe, where she became friends with Thomas Carlyle, Giuseppe
Mazzini, George Sand and many other intellectual and political leaders. She fell
in love with an Italian revolutionary was caught up in that nation's political
situation, not sailing for home with her husband and son until 1850. She and her
family drowned off Fire Island in the wreck of the ship returning her to
America. Throughout her relatively short life, Margaret Fuller pursued both
knowledge and experience with boundless energy and a brilliant mind, having a
strong influence on generations of women to come and fulfilling her own
statement that "Very early, I knew that the only object in life was to grow."
Additional Resources:Capper,
Charles. Margaret Fuller: an American romantic life. New York: Oxford
University Press, 1992. NOTES: Includes bibliographical references and indexes.
Kornfeld, Eve. Margaret Fuller: a brief biography with documents. Boston:
Bedford Books, c1997. NOTES: "The Bedford series in history and culture."
Includes bibliographical references. (p. 241-244) and index.
Edited by Robert N. Hudspeth. The Letter of Margaret Fuller. New York:
Cornell Univesoty Press, 1983-1994. 6 volumes.
Edited by: Fuller's brother, Arthur B. Fuller. Life Without and Life Within
Boston: Roberts Brothers, 1874.
Compiled by: Bell Gale Chevigny. The Woman and the Myth. Old Westbury, New York:
Feminist Press, 1976. Revised and expanded ed., 1994.
Edited by Donna Dickenson. Woman in the nineteenth century and other writings.
Oxford [Eng.]; New York: Oxford University Press, 1994. NOTES: "World's
classics" series. Includes bibliographical references (p.[223]-361).
Papers 1662-1902, 17 volumes. Harvard University, Houghton Library, Department
of Manuscripts. Cambridge, Massachusetts.
Letters 1830-1849, 1 box. Massachusetts Historical Society. Boston,
Massachusetts.
Manuscripts ca. 1835-ca. 1904, extent unknown. Boston Public Library, Rare Books
and Manuscripts. Boston, Massachusetts.
Papers 1836-1850, 2 in. And Papers 1810-1850. Fruitlands Museum Library.
Harvard, Massachusetts.