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“Dissenters” is an umbrella term for Christians who did not belong to England’s established (Anglican) church—ranging across a spectrum from relatively staunch and orthodox Methodists or Presbyterians, to free-thinking Unitarians and others of a decidedly radical stripe. Wollstonecraft spent time among Dissenters in her intellectual circles and sympathized with some of the more unorthodox ones. Here, however, she seems to have in mind the more “prim” sectarians within the dissenting world, and she draws an interesting comparison between the way dissenters are viewed by society and the way women are viewed. The main similarity, she argues, is that like women…