As with the condescension to Justine's Catholicism (I:5:6, I:7:21), this ostensible
                     religious bias needs to be placed within the conventions of English publishing and
                     religious attitudes. It is unlikely that Mary Shelley herself subscribes to them.
                     Indeed, if in this chapter one reads in the attitudes of Turks to women some sense
                     of reflection on contemporary English attitudes, then, Mary Shelley would appear to
                     be playing something of her mother's game. And the mother-daughter relationship here
                     certainly testifies to that which Mary Shelley derived from the frequent perusal of
                     her mother's writings, an inculcation of ideals of independence on which, like, Safie
                     she was not afraid to act. 
