
In Mill's time a woman was generally subject to the whims of her husband or father due to social norms which said women were both physically and mentally less able than men and therefore needed to be "taken care of". Mill often used his position as a member of Parliament to demand the vote for women, a controversial position for the time. This argument is applied to both men and women. Mill argues that people should be able to vote to defend their own rights and to learn to stand on their two feet, morally and intellectually. Mill believed everyone should have the right to vote, with the only exceptions being barbarians and uneducated people. He conceived of human beings as morally and intellectually capable of being educated and civilised.

He asserted that the higher pleasures of the intellect yielded far greater happiness than the lower pleasure of the senses. Mill was convinced that the moral and intellectual advancement of humankind would result in greater happiness for everybody. While scholars generally agree that John Stuart Mill was the sole author, it is also noted that some of the arguments are similar to Harriet Taylor Mill's essay The Enfranchisement of Women, which was published in 1851. But all that is most striking and profound in what was written by me belongs to my wife, coming from the fund of thought that had been made common to us both by our innumerable conversations and discussions on a topic that filled so large a place in our minds. In his autobiography, Mill describes his indebtedness to his wife, and his daughter Helen Taylor for the creation of The Subjection of Women:Īs ultimately published it was enriched with some important ideas of my daughter’s and some passages of her writing.

At the time of its publication, the essay's argument for equality between the sexes was an affront to European conventional norms regarding the status of men and women. Mill submitted the finished manuscript of their collaborative work On Liberty (1859) soon after her untimely death in late 1858, and then continued work on The Subjection of Women until its completion in 1861.

The Subjection of Women is an essay by English philosopher, political economist and civil servant John Stuart Mill published in 1869, with ideas he developed jointly with his wife Harriet Taylor Mill.
