In the work against war, Woolf notes that women—unlike many of their brothers—have four great but perhaps misunderstood teachers: And those teachers, biography indicates, obliquely, and indirectly, but emphatically and indisputably none the less, were poverty, chastity, derision, and—but what word covers “lack of rights and privileges?” Shall we press that old word “freedom” once more into service? “Freedom from unreal loyalties,” then, was the fourth of their teachers; that freedom from loyalty to old schools, old colleges, old churches, old ceremonies, old countries which all these women enjoyed, and which, to a great extent, we still enjoy by the law and custom of England. We have no time to coin new words, greatly though the language is in need of them. Let “freedom from unreal loyalties” then stand as the fourth great teacher of the daughters of educated men. Woolf, Three Guineas, page 267 These are strange teachers. We may be forgiven for not seeing them as such when they’ve…
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