US
Feminism - Wikipedia
Feminism - Wikipedia
Jump to content
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Range of socio-political movements and ideologies
Not to be confused with
Womanism
"Feminist" redirects here. For other uses, see
Feminist (disambiguation)
This article
may be in need of reorganization to comply with Wikipedia's
layout guidelines
Please help by
editing the article
to make improvements to the overall structure.
May 2025
Learn how and when to remove this message
The merged
Venus symbol
with
raised fist
is a symbol of feminism;
Robin Morgan
designed it for a
protest of the 1969 Miss America pageant
, where it was popularized.
Part of
a series
on
Feminism
History
Feminist history
Women's history
American
British
Canadian
German
Waves
First
Second
Third
Fourth
Timelines
Women's suffrage
Muslim countries
US
Other women's rights
Women's suffrage
by country
Austria
Australia
Canada
Colombia
India
Japan
Kuwait
Liechtenstein
New Zealand
Philippines
Spain
Second Republic
Francoist
Switzerland
United Kingdom
Cayman Islands
Wales
United States
states
Intersectional variants
Fat
Lesbian
Lesbian of color
Radical lesbianism
Separatist
Sex-positive
Transfeminism
Postgenderism
Vegetarian ecofeminism
Socialist
Anarchist
Queer
Jineology
Marxist
Critical theory
Standpoint
Materialist
Ecofeminist
Postcolonial
Global
Transnational
Xenofeminism
Multicultural
Africana womanism
Black
Hip hop
Lesbian
Ratchet
Chicana
Lesbian
Indigenous
Native American
Multiracial
Romani
Womanism
Other variants
Anti-abortion
Conservative
Equity
Femonationalism
Liberal
Maternal
Postfeminism
Reactionary
State
Carceral
Imperial
Embedded
Gender-critical
or
trans-exclusionary
By country
Victim
White
Religious variants
Atheist
Buddhist
Christian
Mormon
New
Womanist
Asian
Neopagan
Dianic Wicca
Reclaiming
Ecofeminist
Hindu
Islamic
Jewish
Orthodox
Sikh
Movements and ideologies
4B movement
White Feather Campaign
Analytical
Anti-fascist
Anti-pornography
Cyber
HCI
Networked
Xeno
Difference
Cultural
Neo
Ecofeminism
Eugenic
Individualist
Liberal
Equality
Social
Labor
Libertarian
Lipstick
Stiletto
Post-structural
Postmodern
Radical
Political lesbianism
Separatist
Technofeminism
Women's liberation
Concepts
Antinaturalism
Choice feminism
Cognitive labor
Conscription
Complementarianism
Literature
Children's literature
Diversity (politics)
Diversity, equity, and inclusion
Effects on society
Equality
Female education
Female genital mutilation
Femicide
Transfemicide
Femonationalism
Femosphere
Feminism in culture
Feminist movement
African-American women's suffrage movement
Art movement
In hip hop
Feminist stripper
Formal equality
Gender equality
Gender quota
Gender role
Girl power
Honor killing
Ideal womanhood
Invisible labor
Internalized sexism
International
Girl's Day
and
Women's Day
Language reform
Feminist capitalism
Gender-blind
Likeability trap
Male privilege
Matriarchal religion
Media
Men in feminism
Misogyny
Trans
Oedipus complex
Opposition to feminism
Pro-feminism
Protofeminism
Purplewashing
Racism
Reproductive justice
Sentencing disparity
Sex workers' rights
Sexual harassment
Sexual objectification
Substantive equality
Toxic masculinity
Transmisogyny
Triple oppression
Violence against women
War on women
Women's empowerment
Women-only space
Women's health
Women's rights
Women in the workforce
Outlooks
Abortion-rights
Bicycling and feminism
Bodily integrity
Criticism of marriage
Views on BDSM
Views on pornography
Views on prostitution
Views on sexual orientation
Views on sexuality
Views on transgender topics
Reproductive rights
Sexual and reproductive health and rights
SCUM Manifesto
Theory
Feminist method
Female gaze
Gender studies
Gender mainstreaming
Gynocentrism
Kyriarchy
Male gaze
Matriarchy
Women's studies
Men's studies
Patriarchy
Écriture féminine
Areas of study
Anthropology
Archaeology
Architecture
Art
Art criticism
Literary criticism
Film theory
Science fiction
Biology
Composition studies
Criminology
Pathways perspective
Economics
FDPA
Geography
International relations
Constructivism
Legal theory
Pedagogy
Philosophy
Aesthetics
Empiricism
Epistemology
Ethics
Justice ethics
Existentialism
Metaphysics
science
Political ecology
Political theory
Pornography
Psychology
Therapy
Revisionist mythology
Sex wars
Sexology
Sociology
Technoscience
Theology
womanist theology
By continent/country
Africa
Democratic Republic of the Congo
Egypt
Ethiopia
Ghana
Mali
Nigeria
Senegal
South Africa
Albania
Australia
Balkans
Bangladesh
Canada
China
Denmark
Finland
France
Germany
Greece
Haiti
Hong Kong
India
Indonesia
Iran
Iraq
Ireland
Israel
Italy
Japan
Latin America
Argentina
Brazil
Chile
Honduras
Mexico
Paraguay
Lebanon
Malaysia
Nepal
Netherlands
New Zealand
Northern Cyprus
Norway
Pakistan
Philippines
Poland
Portugal
Russia
Saudi Arabia
South Korea
Sweden
Syria
Taiwan
Thailand
Trinidad and Tobago
Turkey
Vietnam
Ukraine
United Kingdom
United States
History of women
Lists and categories
Lists
Articles
Feminists
by nationality
Literature
American feminist literature
Feminist comic books
Feminist songs
Conservative feminisms
Ecofeminist authors
Feminist art critics
Feminist economists
Feminist philosophers
Feminist poets
Feminist rhetoricians
Jewish feminists
Muslim feminists
Feminist parties
Suffragists and suffragettes
Women's rights activists
Women's studies journals
Women's suffrage organizations
Categories
Women's rights by country
Feminists by nationality
Feminism portal
Politics portal
Society portal
Part of
a series
on
Feminist philosophy
Major works
A Vindication of
the Rights of
Woman
(1792)
The Subjection of Women
(1869)
The Origin of the Family, Private Property and the State
(1884)
The Second Sex
(1949)
The Feminine Mystique
(1963)
Sexual Politics
(1969)
The Dialectic of Sex
(1970)
Speculum of the Other Woman
(1974)
This Sex Which is Not One
(1977)
Gyn/Ecology
(1978)
"Throwing Like a Girl"
(1980)
In a Different Voice
(1982)
The Politics of Reality
(1983)
Women, Race, and Class
(1983)
Feminist Theory: From Margin to Center
(1984)
The Creation of Patriarchy
(1986)
Toward a Feminist Theory of the State
(1989)
Gender Trouble
(1990)
Sexual Personae
(1990)
Black Feminist Thought
(1990)
Feminism and the Mastery of Nature
(1993)
Whipping Girl
(2007)
The Promise of Happiness
(2010)
Major thinkers
Bartky
Baier
de Beauvoir
Bebel
Boggs
Butler
Cixous
Cleyre
De la Cruz
Collins
Daly
Davis
Démar
Dworkin
Federici
Firestone
Fourier
Friedan
Frye
Gamond
Goldman
Grosz
Haslanger
hooks
Irigaray
Jaggar
Kristeva
Lerner
Lorde
Lugones
Luxemburg
MacKinnon
Mama
Michel
Mill
Taylor Mill
Millett
Nussbaum
Paglia
Pankhurst
Pateman
Plumwood
Rubin
Saadawi
Showalter
Solanas
Spivak
Voilquin
Wittig
Wollstonecraft
Young
Zetkin
Ideas
Feminism
analytical
epistemology
ethics
existentialism
metaphysics
science
Gender equality
Gender performativity
Social construction of gender
Care ethics
Intersectionality
Standpoint theory
Journals
Feminist Philosophy Quarterly
Hypatia
philoSOPHIA
Radical Philosophy
Signs
Category
Feminist philosophy
Feminism
is a range of socio-
political movements
and
ideologies
that aim to define and establish the political, economic, personal, and social
equality of the sexes
Feminism holds the position that modern societies are
patriarchal
—they prioritize the male point of view—and that women are treated unjustly in these societies.
10
Efforts to change this include fighting against
gender stereotypes
and improving educational, professional, and interpersonal opportunities and outcomes for women. A person who advocates for feminism is known as a
feminist
Originating in late 18th-century Europe,
feminist movements
have campaigned and continue to campaign for
women's rights
, including the right to
vote
run for public office
work
, earn
equal pay
own property
receive education
, enter into
contracts
, have equal rights within
marriage
, and
maternity leave
. Feminists have also worked to ensure access to
contraception
, legal
abortions
, and
social integration
; and to protect women and girls from
sexual assault
sexual harassment
, and
domestic violence
11
Changes in female dress standards and acceptable physical activities for women have also been part of feminist movements.
12
Many scholars consider feminist campaigns to be a main force behind major historical
societal changes
for women's rights, particularly in
the West
, where they are near-universally credited with achieving
women's suffrage
gender-neutral language
reproductive rights
for women (including access to contraceptives and
abortion
), and the right to enter into contracts and own property.
13
Although feminist advocacy is, and has been, mainly focused on women's rights, some argue for the inclusion of
men's liberation
within its aims, because they believe that men are also harmed by traditional
gender roles
14
Feminist theory
, which emerged from feminist movements, aims to understand the nature of gender inequality by examining women's social roles and lived experiences. Feminist theorists have developed theories in a variety of disciplines in order to respond to issues concerning gender.
15
16
Numerous feminist movements and ideologies have developed over the years, representing different viewpoints and political aims. Traditionally, since the 19th century,
first-wave
liberal feminism
, which sought political and legal equality through
reforms
within a
liberal democratic
framework, was contrasted with
labour
-based
proletarian
women's movements that over time developed into
socialist
and
Marxist feminism
based on
class struggle
theory.
17
Since the 1960s, both of these traditions are also contrasted with the
radical feminism
that arose from the
radical
wing of
second-wave feminism
and that calls for a radical reordering of society to eliminate patriarchy. Liberal, socialist, and radical feminism are sometimes referred to as the "Big Three" schools of feminist thought.
18
Modern feminist activism, scholarship, and policy tend to define contemporary feminism as a movement grounded in
human rights
solidarity
, and
intersectionality
; for example
UN Women
emphasized in 2024 that "the feminist goals of intersectional justice and gender equality can only be achieved if all women and all LGBTIQ+ people are included as part of a broad, intersectional feminist movement rooted in the universality and indivisibility of human rights,"
19
while a group of 28
Nordic
feminist studies departments, academic journals and feminist organizations in 2025 defined feminism as "a universal human rights movement built on solidarity, intersectionality, and compassion."
20
Since the late 20th century, many newer forms of feminism have emerged. Some forms, such as
white feminism
and
gender-critical feminism
, have been criticized as taking into account only white, middle class, college-educated,
heterosexual
, or
cisgender
perspectives. These criticisms have led to the creation of ethnically specific or
multicultural
forms of feminism, such as
black feminism
and
intersectional
feminism.
21
History
Main article:
History of feminism
For a chronological guide, see
Timeline of feminism
Terminology
See also:
Protofeminism
Mary Wollstonecraft
is seen by many as a founder of feminism due to her 1792 book titled
A Vindication of the Rights of Woman
in which she argues that class and private property are the basis of discrimination against women, and that women as much as men needed equal rights.
22
23
24
25
Charles Fourier
, a
utopian socialist
and French philosopher, is credited with having coined the word "féminisme" in 1837,
26
but no trace of the word have been found in his works.
27
The word "féminisme" ("feminism") first appeared in
France
in 1871 in a medicine thesis about men suffering from tuberculosis and having developed, according to the author Ferdinand-Valère Faneau de la Cour, feminine traits.
28
The word "féministe" ("feminist"), inspired by its medical use, was coined by
Alexandre Dumas fils
in a 1872 essay, referring to men who supported women rights. In both cases, the use of the word was very negative and reflected a criticism of a so-called "confusion of the sexes" by women who refused to abide by the sexual division of society and challenged the inequalities between sexes.
28
The concepts appeared in the
Netherlands
in 1872,
29
Great Britain
in the 1890s, and the
United States
in 1910.
30
31
The
Oxford English Dictionary
dates the first appearance in English in this meaning back to 1895.
32
Depending on the historical moment, culture and country, feminists around the world have had different causes and goals. Most western feminist historians contend that all movements working to obtain women's rights should be considered feminist movements, even when they did not (or do not) apply the term to themselves.
33
34
35
36
37
38
Other historians assert that the term should be limited to the modern feminist movement and its descendants. Those historians use the label "
protofeminist
" to describe earlier movements.
39
Clara Zetkin
(left) with
Rosa Luxemburg
(right) in January 1910. Zetkin partly initiated
International Women's Day
Feminist suffrage parade, New York City, 1912
Charlotte Perkins Gilman
wrote about feminism for the
Atlanta Constitution
, 10 December 1916.
After selling her home,
Emmeline Pankhurst
, pictured in New York City in 1913, travelled constantly, giving speeches throughout Britain and the United States.
In the Netherlands,
Wilhelmina Drucker
(1847–1925) fought successfully for the vote and equal rights for women, through organizations she founded.
Louise Weiss
along with other Parisian
suffragettes
in 1935. The newspaper headline reads "The Frenchwoman Must Vote".
Waves
The history of the modern western feminist movement is divided into multiple "waves".
40
41
42
The
first
comprised women's suffrage movements of the 19th and early-20th centuries, promoting women's right to vote. The
second wave
, the
women's liberation movement
, began in the 1960s and campaigned for legal and social equality for women. In or around 1992, a
third wave
was identified, characterized by a focus on individuality and diversity.
43
Additionally, some have argued for the existence of a
fourth wave
44
starting around 2012, which has used
social media
to combat
sexual harassment
violence against women
and
rape culture
; it is best known for the
Me Too movement
45
19th and early 20th centuries
Main article:
First-wave feminism
First-wave feminism was a period of activity during the 19th and early-20th centuries. In the UK and US, it focused on the promotion of equal contract, marriage, parenting, and property rights for women. New legislation included the
Custody of Infants Act 1839
in the UK, which introduced the
tender years doctrine
for child custody and gave women the right of custody of their children for the first time.
46
47
48
Other legislation, such as the
Married Women's Property Act 1870
in the UK and extended in the
1882 Act
49
became models for similar legislation in other British territories.
Victoria
passed legislation in 1884 and
New South Wales
in 1889; the remaining Australian colonies passed similar legislation between 1890 and 1897. With the turn of the 19th century, activism focused primarily on gaining political power, particularly the right of women's
suffrage
, though some feminists were active in campaigning for women's
sexual
reproductive
, and
economic rights
too.
50
Women's suffrage
(the right to vote and stand for parliamentary office) began in Britain's
Australasian
colonies at the end of the 19th century, with the self-governing colony of
New Zealand
granting women the right to vote in 1893;
South Australia
followed suit with the
Constitutional Amendment (Adult Suffrage) Act 1894
in 1894. This was followed by Australia granting female suffrage in 1902.
51
52
In Britain, the suffragettes and
suffragists
campaigned for the women's vote, as well as served the government and increase military enlistment by participating in the
White Feather Campaign
. In 1918 the
Representation of the People Act
was passed granting the vote to women over the age of 30 who owned property. In 1928, this was extended to all women over 21.
53
Emmeline Pankhurst
was the most notable activist in England.
Time
named her one of the
100 Most Important People of the 20th Century
, stating: "she shaped an idea of women for our time; she shook society into a new pattern from which there could be no going back."
54
In the US, notable leaders of this movement included
Lucretia Mott
Elizabeth Cady Stanton
, and
Susan B. Anthony
, who each campaigned for the
abolition of slavery
before championing women's right to vote. These women were influenced by the
Quaker
theology of spiritual equality, which asserts that men and women are equal under God.
55
They were also influenced by earlier American feminist thought leaders
Judith Sargent Murray
John Neal
Sarah Moore Grimké
, and
Margaret Fuller
56
In the US, first-wave feminism is considered to have ended with the passage of the
Nineteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution
(1919), granting women the right to vote in all states. The term
first wave
was coined retroactively when the term
second-wave feminism
came into use.
50
57
58
59
60
In Germany
feminists
like
Clara Zetkin
were very interested in
women's politics
, including the fight for
equal opportunities
and
women's suffrage
, through socialism. She helped to develop the social-democratic
women's movement
in Germany. From 1891 to 1917, she edited the SPD women's newspaper
Die Gleichheit
(Equality). In 1907 she became the leader of the newly founded "Women's Office" at the SPD. She also contributed to
International Women's Day
(IWD).
61
62
During the late
Qing period
and reform movements such as the
Hundred Days' Reform
Chinese feminists
called for women's liberation from traditional roles and
Neo-Confucian
gender segregation
63
64
65
Later, the
Chinese Communist Party
created projects aimed at integrating women into the workforce, and claimed that the revolution had successfully achieved women's liberation.
66
According to Nawar al-Hassan Golley, Arab feminism was closely connected with
Arab nationalism
. In 1899,
Qasim Amin
, considered the "father" of Arab feminism, wrote
The Liberation of Women
, which argued for legal and social reforms for women.
67
He drew links between women's position in Egyptian society and nationalism, leading to the development of Cairo University and the National Movement.
68
In 1923
Hoda Shaarawi
founded the
Egyptian Feminist Union
, became its president and a symbol of the Arab women's rights movement.
68
The
Iranian Constitutional Revolution
in 1905 triggered the
Iranian women's movement
, which aimed to achieve women's equality in
education
, marriage, careers, and
legal rights
69
However, during the
Iranian revolution
of 1979, many of the rights that
women
had gained from the women's movement were systematically abolished, such as the
Family Protection Law
70
Mid-20th century
By the mid-20th century, women still lacked significant rights. In
France
, women obtained the
right to vote
only with the
Provisional Government of the French Republic
of 21 April 1944.
The Consultative Assembly of Algiers of 1944
proposed on 24 March 1944 to grant eligibility to women but following an amendment by
Fernard Grenier
, they were given full citizenship, including the right to vote. Grenier's proposition was adopted 51 to 16. In May 1947, following the
November 1946 elections
, the sociologist Robert Verdier minimized the "
gender gap
", stating in
Le Populaire
that women had not voted in a consistent way, dividing themselves, as men, according to social classes. During the
baby boom
period, feminism waned in importance. Wars (both World War I and World War II) had seen the provisional emancipation of some women, but post-war periods signalled the return to conservative roles.
71
In
Switzerland
, women gained the
right to vote
in federal
elections
in 1971;
72
but in the canton of
Appenzell Innerrhoden
women obtained the right to vote on local issues only in 1991, when the canton was forced to do so by the
Federal Supreme Court of Switzerland
73
In
Liechtenstein
, women were given the right to vote by the
women's suffrage referendum of 1984
. Three prior referendums held in
1968
1971
and
1973
had failed to secure women's right to vote.
74
Workers in the US
Women's Army Corps
deploying to Europe to fulfill the labor roles of men who were being redeployed to the Pacific, 1945
Feminists continued to campaign for the reform of
family laws
which gave husbands control over their wives. Although by the 20th century
coverture
had been abolished in the UK and US, married women in many continental European countries still had very few rights. For instance, in France, married women did not receive the right to work without their husband's permission until 1965.
75
76
Feminists have also worked to abolish the
"marital exemption" in rape laws
which precluded the prosecution of husbands for the rape of their wives.
77
Earlier efforts by first-wave feminists such as
Voltairine de Cleyre
Victoria Woodhull
and
Elizabeth Clarke Wolstenholme-Elmy
to criminalize marital rape in the late 19th century had failed;
78
79
this was only achieved a century later in most Western countries, but is still not achieved in many other parts of the world.
80
French philosopher
Simone de Beauvoir
provided a
Marxist
solution and an
existentialist
view on many of the questions of feminism with the publication of
The Second Sex
in 1949.
81
The book expressed feminists' sense of injustice. Second-wave feminism is a feminist movement beginning in the early 1960s
82
and continuing to the present; as such, it coexists with third-wave feminism. Second-wave feminism is largely concerned with issues of equality beyond suffrage, such as ending
gender discrimination
50
The Feminine Mystique
(1963) by
Betty Friedan
and
The Female Eunuch
(1970) by
Germaine Greer
are considered landmark texts in second-wave feminism.
Second-wave feminists see women's cultural and political inequalities as inextricably linked and encourage women to understand aspects of their personal lives as deeply politicized and as reflecting sexist power structures. The feminist activist and author
Carol Hanisch
coined the slogan "The Personal is Political", which became synonymous with the second wave.
11
83
Second- and third-wave feminism in China has been characterized by a reexamination of women's roles during the communist revolution and other reform movements, and new discussions about whether women's equality has actually been fully achieved.
66
In 1956, President
Gamal Abdel Nasser
of
Egypt
initiated "
state feminism
", which outlawed
discrimination based on gender
and granted women's suffrage, but also blocked political activism by feminist leaders.
84
During
Sadat
's presidency, his wife,
Jehan Sadat
, publicly advocated further women's rights, though Egyptian policy and society began to move away from women's equality with the new
Islamist
movement and growing conservatism.
85
However, some activists proposed a new feminist movement,
Islamic feminism
, which argues for women's equality within an Islamic framework.
86
In
Latin America
, revolutions brought changes in women's status in countries such as
Nicaragua
, where
feminist ideology during the Sandinista Revolution
aided women's quality of life but fell short of achieving a social and ideological change.
87
In 1963,
Betty Friedan
's book
The Feminine Mystique
helped voice the discontent that American women felt. The book is widely credited with sparking the beginning of second-wave feminism in the United States.
88
Within ten years, women made up over half the First World workforce.
89
In 1970, Australian writer
Germaine Greer
published
The Female Eunuch
, which became a worldwide bestseller, reportedly driving up divorce rates.
90
91
Late 20th and early 21st centuries
Third-wave feminism
Main article:
Third-wave feminism
Feminist, author and social activist
bell hooks
(1952–2021)
Third-wave feminism is traced to the emergence of the
riot grrrl
feminist
punk subculture
in
Olympia, Washington
, in the early 1990s,
92
93
and to
Anita Hill
's televised testimony in 1991—to an all-male, all-white
Senate Judiciary Committee
—that
Clarence Thomas
, nominated for the
Supreme Court of the United States
, had
sexually harassed
her. The term
third wave
is credited to
Rebecca Walker
, who responded to Thomas's appointment to the Supreme Court with an article in
Ms.
magazine, "Becoming the Third Wave" (1992).
94
95
She wrote:
So I write this as a plea to all women, especially women of my generation: Let Thomas' confirmation serve to remind you, as it did me, that the fight is far from over. Let this dismissal of a woman's experience move you to anger. Turn that outrage into political power. Do not vote for them unless they work for us. Do not have sex with them, do not break bread with them, do not nurture them if they don't prioritize our freedom to control our bodies and our lives. I am not a post-feminism feminist. I am the Third Wave.
94
Third-wave feminism also sought to challenge or avoid what it deemed the second wave's
essentialist
definitions of
femininity
, which, third-wave feminists argued, overemphasized the experiences of upper middle-class white women. Third-wave feminists often focused on "
micro-politics
" and challenged the second wave's paradigm as to what was, or was not, good for women, and tended to use a
post-structuralist
interpretation of gender and sexuality.
50
96
97
98
Feminist leaders rooted in the second wave, such as
Gloria Anzaldúa
bell hooks
Chela Sandoval
Cherríe Moraga
Audre Lorde
Maxine Hong Kingston
, and many other non-white feminists, sought to negotiate a space within feminist thought for consideration of race-related subjectivities.
97
99
100
Third-wave feminism also contained internal debates between
difference feminists
, who believe that there are important psychological differences between the sexes, and those who believe that there are no inherent psychological differences between the sexes and contend that gender roles are due to
social conditioning
101
Standpoint theory
Standpoint theory is a feminist theoretical point of view stating that a person's social position influences their knowledge. This perspective argues that research and theory treat women and the feminist movement as insignificant and refuses to see traditional science as unbiased.
102
Since the 1980s,
standpoint feminists
have argued that the feminist movement should address global issues (such as rape,
incest
, and prostitution) and culturally specific issues (such as
female genital mutilation
in some parts of
Africa
and
Arab societies
, as well as
glass ceiling
practices that impede women's advancement in developed economies) in order to understand how gender inequality interacts with racism,
homophobia
classism
, and
colonization
in a "
matrix of domination
".
103
104
Fourth-wave feminism
Main article:
Fourth-wave feminism
Protest against
La Manada sexual abuse case
sentence, Pamplona, 2018
Fourth-wave feminism is a proposed extension of third-wave feminism which corresponds to a resurgence in interest in feminism beginning around 2012 and associated with the use of social media.
105
106
According to feminist scholar Prudence Chamberlain, the focus of the fourth wave is justice for women and opposition to sexual harassment and violence against women. Its essence, she writes, is "incredulity that certain attitudes can still exist".
107
Fourth-wave feminism is "defined by technology", according to
Kira Cochrane
, and is characterized particularly by the use of
Tumblr
, and blogs such as
Feministing
to challenge
misogyny
and further
gender equality
105
108
109
2017 Women's March
, Washington, D.C.
Issues that fourth-wave feminists focus on include
street
and
workplace harassment
campus sexual assault
, and rape culture. Scandals involving the harassment, abuse, and murder of women and girls have galvanized the movement. These have included the
2012 Delhi gang rape
, 2012
Jimmy Savile allegations
, the
Bill Cosby allegations
2014 Isla Vista killings
, 2016
trial of Jian Ghomeshi
, 2017
Harvey Weinstein allegations
, and subsequent
Weinstein effect
, and the
2017 Westminster sexual scandals
110
International Women's Strike
, Paraná, Argentina, 2019
Examples of fourth-wave feminist campaigns include the
Everyday Sexism Project
No More Page 3
Stop Bild Sexism
Mattress Performance
10 Hours of Walking in NYC as a Woman
#YesAllWomen
Free the Nipple
One Billion Rising
, the
2017 Women's March
, the
2018 Women's March
, and the
#MeToo
movement. In December 2017,
Time
magazine chose several prominent female activists involved in the #MeToo movement, dubbed "the silence breakers", as
Person of the Year
111
112
Decolonial feminism
Decolonial feminism reformulates the
coloniality of gender
by critiquing the very formation of gender and its subsequent formations of
patriarchy
and the
gender binary
, not as universal constants across cultures, but as structures that have been instituted by and for the benefit of
European colonialism
Marìa Lugones
proposes that decolonial feminism speaks to how "the colonial imposition of gender cuts across questions of ecology, economics, government, relations with the spirit world, and knowledge, as well as across everyday practices that either habituate us to take care of the world or to destroy it."
113
Decolonial feminists like
Karla Jessen Williamson
and Rauna Kuokkanen have examined colonialism as a force that has imposed
gender hierarchies
on Indigenous women that have disempowered and fractured Indigenous communities and ways of life.
114
115
Postfeminism
Main article:
Postfeminism
The term
postfeminism
is used to describe a range of viewpoints reacting to feminism since the 1980s. While not being "anti-feminist", postfeminists believe that women have achieved second wave goals while being critical of third- and fourth-wave feminist goals. The term was first used to describe a backlash against second-wave feminism, but it is now a label for a wide range of theories that take critical approaches to previous feminist discourses and includes challenges to the second wave's ideas.
116
Other postfeminists say that feminism is no longer relevant to today's society.
117
118
Amelia Jones
has written that the postfeminist texts which emerged in the 1980s and 1990s portrayed second-wave feminism as a monolithic entity.
119
Dorothy Chunn describes a "blaming narrative" under the postfeminist moniker, where feminists are undermined for continuing to make demands for gender equality in a "post-feminist" society, where "gender equality has (already) been achieved". According to Chunn, "many feminists have voiced disquiet about the ways in which rights and equality discourses are now used against them".
120
Theory
Main article:
Feminist theory
See also:
Gynocriticism
and
écriture féminine
Feminist theory is the extension of feminism into theoretical or philosophical fields. It encompasses work in a variety of disciplines, including
anthropology
sociology
economics
women's studies
literary criticism
121
122
art history
123
psychoanalysis
124
and
philosophy
125
126
Feminist theory aims to understand
gender inequality
and focuses on gender politics, power relations, and sexuality. While providing a critique of these social and political relations, much of feminist theory also focuses on the promotion of women's rights and interests. Themes explored in feminist theory include discrimination,
stereotyping
objectification
(especially
sexual objectification
),
oppression
, and
patriarchy
15
16
In the field of
literary criticism
Elaine Showalter
describes the development of feminist theory as having three phases. The first she calls "feminist critique", in which the feminist reader examines the ideologies behind literary phenomena. The second Showalter calls "
gynocriticism
", in which the "woman is producer of textual meaning". The last phase she calls "gender theory", in which the "ideological inscription and the literary effects of the sex/gender system are explored".
127
This was paralleled in the 1970s by
French feminists
, who developed the concept of
écriture féminine
(which translates as "female or feminine writing").
116
Hélène Cixous
argues that writing and philosophy are
phallocentric
and along with other French feminists such as
Luce Irigaray
emphasize "writing from the body" as a subversive exercise.
116
The work of
Julia Kristeva
, a feminist psychoanalyst and philosopher, and
Bracha Ettinger
128
artist and psychoanalyst, has influenced feminist theory in general and feminist literary criticism in particular. However, as the scholar Elizabeth Wright points out, "none of these French feminists align themselves with the feminist movement as it appeared in the
Anglophone
world".
116
129
Movements and ideologies
Main article:
Feminist movements and ideologies
Many overlapping feminist movements and ideologies have developed over the years. Feminism is often divided into three main traditions called liberal, radical, and socialist/Marxist feminism, sometimes known as the "Big Three" schools of feminist thought. Since the late 20th century, newer forms of feminisms have also emerged.
18
Some branches of feminism track the political leanings of the larger society to a greater or lesser degree, or focus on specific topics, such as the environment.
Modern feminist activism, scholarship, and policy tend to define contemporary feminism as a movement grounded in
human rights
solidarity
, and
intersectionality
. For example
UN Women
emphasized in 2024 that "the feminist goals of intersectional justice and gender equality can only be achieved if all women and all LGBTIQ+ people are included as part of a broad, intersectional feminist movement rooted in the universality and indivisibility of human rights."
19
Similarly, in 2025 a group of 28
Nordic
feminist studies departments, academic journals and feminist organizations defined feminism as "a universal human rights movement built on solidarity, intersectionality, and compassion."
20
Most feminists oppose all kinds of
sexism
including
discrimination against men
130
Liberal feminism
Main article:
Liberal feminism
Elizabeth Cady Stanton
, a major figure in 19th-century liberal feminism
Liberal feminism
, also known under other names such as reformist, mainstream, or historically as bourgeois feminism,
131
132
arose from 19th-century first-wave feminism, and was historically linked to 19th-century
liberalism
and
progressivism
, while 19th-century conservatives tended to oppose feminism as such. Liberal feminism seeks equality of men and women through political and
legal reform
within a
liberal democratic
framework, without radically altering the structure of society; liberal feminism "works within the structure of mainstream society to integrate women into that structure".
133
During the 19th and early 20th centuries liberal feminism focused especially on women's suffrage and
access to education
134
Former Norwegian supreme court justice and former president of the liberal
Norwegian Association for Women's Rights
Karin Maria Bruzelius
, has described liberal feminism as "a realistic, sober, practical feminism".
135
Susan Wendell argues that "liberal feminism is an historical tradition that grew out of liberalism, as can be seen very clearly in the work of such feminists as Mary Wollstonecraft and
John Stuart Mill
, but feminists who took principles from that tradition have developed analyses and goals that go far beyond those of 18th and 19th century liberal feminists, and many feminists who have goals and strategies identified as liberal feminist ... reject major components of liberalism" in a modern or party-political sense; she highlights "equality of opportunity" as a defining feature of liberal feminism.
136
Liberal feminism is a very broad term that encompasses many, often diverging modern branches and a variety of feminist and general political perspectives; some historically liberal branches are
equality feminism
social feminism
equity feminism
difference feminism
individualist/libertarian feminism
, and some forms of
state feminism
, particularly the state feminism of the
Nordic countries
137
The broad field of liberal feminism is sometimes confused with the more recent and smaller branch known as libertarian feminism, which tends to diverge significantly from mainstream liberal feminism. For example, "libertarian feminism does not require social measures to reduce material inequality; in fact, it opposes such measures ... in contrast, liberal feminism may support such requirements and egalitarian versions of feminism insist on them."
138
Catherine Rottenberg notes that the
raison d'être
of classic liberal feminism was "to pose an immanent critique of liberalism, revealing the gendered exclusions within liberal democracy's proclamation of universal equality, particularly with respect to the law, institutional access, and the full incorporation of women into the public sphere." Rottenberg contrasts classic liberal feminism with modern
neoliberal
feminism, which "seems perfectly in sync with the evolving neoliberal order."
139
According to Zhang and Rios, "liberal feminism tends to be adopted by 'mainstream' (i.e., middle-class) women who do not disagree with the current social structure." They found that liberal feminism with its focus on equality is viewed as the dominant and "default" form of feminism.
140
Some modern forms of feminism that historically grew out of the broader liberal tradition have more recently also been described as
conservative
in relative terms. This is particularly the case for libertarian feminism which conceives of people as self-owners and therefore as entitled to freedom from coercive interference.
141
Radical feminism
Radical feminism
arose from the
radical
wing of second-wave feminism and calls for a radical reordering of society to eliminate
male supremacy
. It considers the male-controlled capitalist hierarchy as the defining feature of women's oppression and the total uprooting and reconstruction of society as necessary.
11
Separatist feminism
does not support heterosexual relationships.
Lesbian feminism
is thus closely related. Other feminists criticize separatist feminism as sexist.
14
Materialist ideologies
Emma Goldman
, a union activist, labour organizer and
feminist anarchist
Rosemary Hennessy
and
Chrys Ingraham
say that materialist forms of feminism grew out of Western Marxist thought and have inspired a number of different (but overlapping) movements, all of which are involved in a critique of capitalism and are focused on ideology's relationship to women.
142
Marxist feminism
argues that capitalism is the root cause of women's oppression, and that discrimination against women in domestic life and employment is an effect of capitalist ideologies.
143
Socialist feminism
distinguishes itself from Marxist feminism by arguing that women's liberation can only be achieved by working to end both the economic and cultural sources of women's oppression.
144
Anarcha-feminists
believe that
class struggle
and
anarchy
against the
state
145
require struggling against patriarchy, which comes from involuntary hierarchy.
citation needed
Other modern feminisms
Ecofeminism
Ecofeminists
see men's control of land as responsible for the oppression of women and destruction of the
natural environment
. Ecofeminism has been criticized for focusing too much on a mystical connection between women and nature.
146
Black and postcolonial ideologies
Further information:
Intersectional feminism
Sara Ahmed
argues that
Black
and
postcolonial
feminisms pose a challenge "to some of the organizing premises of Western feminist thought".
147
During much of its
history
, feminist movements and
theoretical developments
were led predominantly by middle-class white women from Western Europe and North America.
99
103
148
However, women of other races have proposed alternative feminisms.
103
This trend accelerated in the 1960s with the civil rights movement in the United States and the end of Western European colonialism in Africa, the Caribbean, parts of Latin America, and Southeast Asia. Since that time, women in
developing nations
and
former colonies
and who are of color or various ethnicities or living in poverty have proposed additional feminisms.
148
Womanism
149
150
emerged after early feminist movements were largely white and middle-class.
99
Postcolonial feminists argue that colonial oppression and Western feminism marginalized postcolonial women but did not turn them passive or voiceless.
21
Third-world feminism
and
indigenous feminism
are closely related to postcolonial feminism.
148
These ideas also correspond with ideas in
African feminism
, motherism,
151
Stiwanism,
152
negofeminism,
153
femalism,
transnational feminism
, and
Africana womanism
154
Social constructionist ideologies
Main article:
Social construction of gender
In the late 20th century various feminists began to argue that gender roles are
socially constructed
155
156
and that it is impossible to generalize women's experiences across cultures and histories.
157
Post-structural feminism
draws on the philosophies of
post-structuralism
and
deconstruction
in order to argue that the concept of gender is created socially and culturally through
discourse
158
Postmodern feminists
also emphasize the social construction of gender and the discursive nature of reality;
155
however, as
Pamela Abbott
et al. write, a postmodern approach to feminism highlights "the existence of multiple truths (rather than simply men and women's standpoints)".
159
Transgender people
Main article:
Feminist views on transgender topics
Third-wave feminists
tend to view the struggle for
trans rights
as an integral part of
intersectional feminism
160
Fourth-wave feminists
also tend to be trans-inclusive.
160
The American
National Organization for Women
(NOW) president
Terry O'Neill
said the struggle against
transphobia
is a feminist issue
161
and NOW has affirmed that "trans women are women, trans girls are girls."
162
Several studies have found that people who identify as feminists tend to be more accepting of trans people than those who do not.
163
164
165
An ideology variously known as
trans-exclusionary radical feminism
(or its acronym, TERF)
166
or gender-critical feminism is critical of concepts of
gender identity
and
transgender rights
, holding that
biological sex
characteristics are an immutable determination of gender or supersede the importance of gender identity,
167
168
169
170
171
that trans women are not women, and that trans men are not men.
172
These views have been described as
transphobic
by many other feminists.
173
174
175
176
Cultural movements
Riot grrrls took an
anti-corporate
stance of
self-sufficiency
and
self-reliance
177
Riot grrrl's emphasis on universal female identity and separatism often appears more closely allied with second-wave feminism than with the third wave.
178
The movement encouraged and made "adolescent girls' standpoints central", allowing them to express themselves fully.
179
Lipstick feminism
is a cultural feminist movement that attempts to respond to the backlash of second-wave radical feminism of the 1960s and 1970s by reclaiming symbols of "feminine" identity such as make-up, suggestive clothing and having a sexual allure as valid and empowering personal choices.
180
181
Demographics
According to 2014
Ipsos
poll covering 15 developed countries, 53 percent of respondents identified as feminists, and 87 percent agreed that "women should be treated equally to men in all areas based on their competency, not their gender". However, only 55 percent of women agreed that they have "full equality with men and the freedom to reach their full dreams and aspirations".
182
Taken together, these studies reflect the importance differentiating between claiming a "feminist identity" and holding "feminist attitudes or beliefs".
183
According to a 2015 poll, 18 percent of Americans use the label of "feminist" to describe themselves, while 85 percent are feminists in practice as they reported they believe in "equality for women". The poll found that 52 percent did not identify as feminist, 26 percent were unsure, and 4 percent provided no response.
184
Sociological research shows that, in the US, increased educational attainment is associated with greater support for feminist issues. In addition, politically liberal people are more likely to support feminist ideals compared to those who are conservative.
185
186
According to a 2016
Survation
poll for the
Fawcett Society
, 7 percent of Britons use the label of "feminist" to describe themselves, while 83 percent say they support equality of opportunity for women – this included higher support from men (86%) than women (81%).
187
188
Sexuality
Main article:
Feminist views on sexuality
Feminist views on sexuality
vary, and have differed by historical period and by cultural context. Feminist attitudes to female sexuality have taken a few different directions. Matters such as the
sex industry
, sexual representation in the media, and issues regarding consent to sex under conditions of male dominance have been particularly controversial among feminists. This debate has culminated in the late 1970s and the 1980s, in what came to be known as the
feminist sex wars
, which pitted
anti-pornography feminism
against
sex-positive feminism
, and parts of the feminist movement were deeply divided by these debates.
189
190
191
192
193
Feminists have taken a variety of positions on different aspects of the
sexual revolution
from the 1960s and 70s. Over the course of the 1970s, a large number of influential women accepted lesbian and
bisexual women
as part of feminism.
194
In heterosexual dating feminists have recognized
gendered dating norms
as unjust and feminist women have shifted towards initiating and taking the first steps during dating.
195
Sex industry
Main articles:
Sex industry
Feminist views on pornography
Feminist views on prostitution
Feminist sex wars
, and
Male prostitution § Feminist studies
Opinions on the sex industry are diverse. Feminists who are critical of the sex industry generally see it as the exploitative result of patriarchal social structures which reinforce sexual and cultural attitudes complicit in rape and sexual harassment. Alternately, feminists who support at least part of the sex industry argue that it can be a medium of feminist expression and reflect a woman's right to control and define her own sexuality.
citation needed
Feminist views of pornography range from condemnation of pornography as a form of violence against women, to an embracing of some forms of pornography as a medium of feminist expression and a legitimate career.
189
190
191
192
193
Similarly, feminists' views on prostitution vary, ranging from critical to supportive.
196
Affirming female sexual autonomy
See also:
My body, my choice
For feminists, a woman's right to control her own sexuality is a key issue and one that is heavily contested between different branches of feminism.
Radical feminists
such as
Catharine MacKinnon
argue that women have very little control over their own bodies, with female sexuality being largely controlled and defined by men in patriarchal societies. Radical feminists argue that sexual violence committed by men is often rooted in ideologies of male sexual entitlement and that these systems grant women very few legitimate options to refuse sexual advances.
197
198
Some radical feminists have argued that women should not engage in heterosexual sex, and choose
lesbianism
as a lifestyle and political choice, a view that has fallen out of favor, as
sexuality
is seen as largely biologically influenced rather than a choice one can make for political reasons.
citation needed
Some radical feminists argue that all cultures are, in one way or another, dominated by ideologies that deny women's right to sexual expression, because men under a patriarchy define sex on their own terms. This entitlement can take different forms, depending on the culture. In some
conservative
and religious cultures marriage is regarded as an institution which requires a wife to be sexually available at all times, virtually without limit; thus, forcing or coercing sex on a wife is not considered a crime or even an abusive behaviour.
199
200
In 1968, radical feminist
Anne Koedt
argued in her essay
The Myth of the Vaginal Orgasm
that women's biology and the
clitoral
orgasm had not been properly analyzed and popularized, because men "have orgasms essentially by friction with the vagina" and not the clitoral area.
201
202
Other branches of feminism such as individualist feminism consider themselves
sex-positive
, and see women's expression of their own sexuality as a right. In this view, what is or is not "degrading" is subjective, and each person has a right to decide for themselves what sexual acts they find degrading and if they want to participate in them or not. Individualist feminist,
Wendy McElroy
wrote in her book,
XXX: A Woman's Right to Pornography
, "let's examine [...] the idea that pornography is degrading to women. Degrading is a subjective term. Personally, I find detergent commercials in which women become orgasmic over soapsuds to be tremendously degrading to women. I find movies in which prostitutes are treated like ignorant drug addicts to be slander against women. Every woman has the right—the need!—to define degradation for herself."
citation needed
According to this view, part of sexual autonomy is the right to define one's boundaries, desires and limits around their sexuality rather than accept a narrative in which all women are victims of men during a sex act.
citation needed
Science
Further information:
Feminist epistemology
Sandra Harding
says that the "moral and political insights of the women's movement have inspired social scientists and biologists to raise critical questions about the ways traditional researchers have explained gender, sex and relations within and between the social and natural worlds."
203
Some feminists, such as
Ruth Hubbard
and
Evelyn Fox Keller
, criticize traditional
scientific discourse
as being historically biased towards a male perspective.
204
A part of the feminist research agenda is the examination of the ways in which power inequities are created or reinforced in scientific and academic institutions.
205
Physicist
Lisa Randall
, appointed to a task force at Harvard by then-president
Lawrence Summers
after his controversial discussion of why women may be underrepresented in science and engineering, said, "I just want to see a whole bunch more women enter the field so these issues don't have to come up anymore."
206
Lynn Hankinson Nelson writes that feminist empiricists find fundamental differences between the experiences of men and women. Thus, they seek to obtain knowledge through the examination of the experiences of women and to "uncover the consequences of omitting, misdescribing, or devaluing them" to account for a range of human experience.
207
Another part of the feminist research agenda is the uncovering of ways in which power inequities are created or reinforced in society and in scientific and academic institutions.
205
Furthermore, despite calls for greater attention to be paid to structures of gender inequity in the academic literature, structural analyses of gender bias rarely appear in highly cited psychological journals, especially in the commonly studied areas of psychology and personality.
208
One criticism of feminist epistemology is that it allows social and political values to influence its findings.
209
Susan Haack
also points out that feminist epistemology reinforces traditional stereotypes about women's thinking (as intuitive and emotional, etc.);
Meera Nanda
further cautions that this may in fact trap women within "traditional gender roles and help justify patriarchy".
210
Biology and gender
Further information:
Gender essentialism
and
Sexual differentiation
Modern feminism challenges the essentialist view of
gender
as biologically intrinsic.
211
212
For example,
Anne Fausto-Sterling
's book,
Myths of Gender
, explores the assumptions embodied in
scientific
research that support a biologically
essentialist
view of gender.
213
In
Delusions of Gender
Cordelia Fine
disputes scientific evidence that suggests that there is an innate biological difference between men's and women's minds, asserting instead that cultural and societal beliefs are the reason for differences between individuals that are commonly perceived as sex differences.
214
Feminist psychology
Main article:
Feminist psychology
Feminism in psychology emerged as a critique of the dominant male outlook on psychological research where only male perspectives were studied with all male subjects. As women earned doctorates in psychology, women and their issues were introduced as legitimate topics of study. Feminist psychology emphasizes social context, lived experience, and qualitative analysis.
215
Projects such as
Psychology's Feminist Voices
have emerged to catalogue the influence of feminist psychologists on the discipline.
216
Culture
Main article:
Feminism in culture
Design
There is a long history of feminist activity in
design
disciplines like
industrial design
graphic design
, and
fashion design
. This work has explored topics like beauty, DIY,
feminine
approaches to design and community-based projects.
217
Some iconic writing includes
Cheryl Buckley
's essays on design and patriarchy
218
and Joan Rothschild's
Design and Feminism: Re-Visioning Spaces, Places, and Everyday Things
219
More recently, Isabel Prochner's research explored how feminist perspectives can support positive change in industrial design, helping to identify systemic social problems and inequities in design and guiding
socially sustainable
and grassroots design solutions.
220
Businesses
See also:
Feminist businesses
Feminist activists have established a range of
feminist businesses
, including
feminist bookstores
, credit unions, presses, mail-order catalogs, and restaurants. These businesses flourished as part of the second and third waves of feminism in the 1970s, 1980s, and 1990s.
221
222
Visual arts
Main article:
Feminist art movement
Corresponding with general developments within feminism, and often including such self-organizing tactics as the consciousness-raising group, the movement began in the 1960s and flourished throughout the 1970s.
223
Jeremy Strick, director of the
Museum of Contemporary Art in Los Angeles
, described the feminist art movement as "the most influential international movement of any during the postwar period", and
Peggy Phelan
says that it "brought about the most far-reaching transformations in both artmaking and art writing over the past four decades".
223
Feminist artist
Judy Chicago
, who created
The Dinner Party
, a set of
vulva-themed ceramic plates
in the 1970s, said in 2009 to
ARTnews
, "There is still an institutional lag and an insistence on a male
Eurocentric
narrative. We are trying to change the future: to get girls and boys to realize that women's art is not an exception—it's a normal part of art history."
224
A feminist approach to the visual arts has most recently developed through
cyberfeminism
and the
posthuman
turn, giving voice to the ways "contemporary female artists are dealing with gender, social media and the notion of embodiment".
225
Literature
Main article:
Feminist literature
See also:
Écriture féminine
List of American feminist literature
List of feminist literature
, and
List of feminist poets
Octavia Butler
, award-winning feminist science fiction author
The feminist movement produced
feminist fiction
, feminist non-fiction, and
feminist poetry
, which created new interest in
women's writing
. It also prompted a general reevaluation of women's
historical
and academic contributions in response to the belief that women's lives and contributions have been underrepresented as areas of scholarly interest.
226
There has also been a close link between feminist literature and
activism
, with feminist writing typically voicing key concerns or ideas of feminism in a particular era.
227
Much of the early period of feminist literary scholarship was given over to the rediscovery and reclamation of texts written by women. In Western feminist literary scholarship, Studies like
Dale Spender
's
Mothers of the Novel
(1986) and Jane Spencer's
The Rise of the Woman Novelist
(1986) were ground-breaking in their insistence that women have always been writing.
citation needed
Commensurate with this growth in scholarly interest, various presses began the task of reissuing long-out-of-print texts.
Virago Press
began to publish its large list of 19th- and early-20th-century novels in 1975 and became one of the first commercial presses to join in the project of reclamation. In the 1980s,
Pandora Press
, responsible for publishing Spender's study, issued a companion line of 18th-century novels written by women.
228
More recently,
Broadview Press
continues to issue 18th- and 19th-century novels, many hitherto out of print, and the
University of Kentucky
has a series of republications of early women's novels.
citation needed
Particular works of literature have come to be known as key feminist texts.
A Vindication of the Rights of Woman
(1792) by
Mary Wollstonecraft
, is one of the earliest works of feminist philosophy.
A Room of One's Own
(1929) by
Virginia Woolf
, is noted in its argument for both a literal and figural space for women writers within a literary tradition dominated by patriarchy.
citation needed
The widespread interest in women's writing is related to a general reassessment and expansion of the
literary canon
. Interest in
post-colonial literatures
gay and lesbian literature
, writing by people of colour, working people's writing, and the cultural productions of other historically marginalized groups has resulted in a whole scale expansion of what is considered "literature", and genres hitherto not regarded as "literary", such as children's writing, journals, letters, travel writing, and many others are now the subjects of scholarly interest.
226
229
230
Most
genres and subgenres
have undergone a similar analysis, so literary studies have entered new territories such as the "
female gothic
231
or
women's science fiction
232
According to Elyce Rae Helford, "Science fiction and fantasy serve as important vehicles for feminist thought, particularly as bridges between theory and practice."
233
Feminist science fiction is sometimes taught at the university level to explore the role of social constructs in understanding gender.
234
Notable texts of this kind are
Ursula K. Le Guin
's
The Left Hand of Darkness
(1969),
Joanna Russ
The Female Man
(1970),
Octavia Butler
's
Kindred
(1979) and
Margaret Atwood
's
Handmaid's Tale
(1985).
citation needed
Hrotsvitha
, first female writer from the
Germanosphere
, first female historian and first feminist playwright
235
Feminist nonfiction has played an important role in voicing concerns about women's lived experiences. For example,
Maya Angelou
's
I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings
was extremely influential, as it represented the specific racism and sexism experienced by black women growing up in the United States.
236
In addition, many feminist movements have embraced
poetry
as a vehicle through which to communicate feminist ideas to public audiences through anthologies, poetry collections, and public readings.
237
Moreover, historical pieces of writing by women have been used by feminists to speak about what women's lives were like in the past while demonstrating the power that they held and the impact they had in their communities.
238
An important figure in the history of women's literature is
Hrotsvitha
c.
935
–973), a
canoness
239
who was an early female poet in the German lands. As a historian, Hrotsvitha is one of the few writers to address women's lives from a woman's perspective during the
Middle Ages
240
Hrotsvitha's six short dramas are considered to be her magnum opus. She has been called "the most remarkable woman of her time"
241
and an important figure in the history of women.
242
Music
Main articles:
Women's music
and
Women in music
American jazz singer and songwriter
Billie Holiday
in New York City in 1947
Women's music
(or womyn's music or wimmin's music) is the music by
women
, for women, and about women.
243
The genre emerged as a musical expression of the second-wave feminist movement
244
as well as the
labour
civil rights
, and
peace movements
245
The movement was started by lesbians such as
Cris Williamson
Meg Christian
, and
Margie Adam
, African-American women activists such as
Bernice Johnson Reagon
and her group
Sweet Honey in the Rock
, and peace activist
Holly Near
245
Women's music also refers to the wider industry of women's music that goes beyond the performing artists to include
studio musicians
producers
sound engineers
technicians
, cover artists, distributors,
promoters
, and festival organizers who are also women.
243
Feminism became a principal concern of
musicologists
in the 1980s
246
as part of the
New Musicology
. Prior to this, in the 1970s, musicologists were beginning to discover women composers and performers, and had begun to review concepts of
canon
, genius, genre, and periodization from a feminist perspective. In other words, the question of how women musicians fit into traditional music history was now being asked.
246
Through the 1980s and 1990s, this trend continued as musicologists like
Susan McClary
Marcia Citron
, and Ruth Solie began to consider the cultural reasons for the marginalizing of women from the received body of work. Concepts such as music as gendered discourse; professionalism; reception of women's music; examination of the sites of music production; relative wealth and education of women; popular music studies in relation to women's identity; patriarchal ideas in music analysis; and notions of gender and difference are among the themes examined during this time.
246
While the
music industry
has long been open to having women in performance or entertainment roles, women are much less likely to have positions of authority, such as being the
leader of an orchestra
247
In popular music, while there are many women singers recording songs, there are very few women behind the
audio console
acting as
music producers
, the individuals who direct and manage the recording process.
248
Cinema
Main article:
Feminist film theory
See also:
Women's cinema
Faten Hamama
(1931–2015), Egyptian film legend, inspired women all over the
Middle East
and
Africa
249
250
Feminist cinema, advocating or illustrating feminist perspectives, arose largely with the development of
feminist film theory
in the late 1960s and early 1970s. Women who were radicalized during the 1960s by political debate and sexual liberation; but the failure of radicalism to produce substantive change for women galvanized them to form consciousness-raising groups and set about analysing, from different perspectives, dominant cinema's construction of women.
251
1972 saw the first feminist film festivals in the U.S. and U.K. as well as the first feminist film journal,
Women & Film
. Trailblazers from this period included
Claire Johnston
and
Laura Mulvey
, who also organized the Women's Event at the
Edinburgh Film Festival
252
Other theorists making a powerful impact on feminist film include
Teresa de Lauretis
, Anneke Smelik and
Kaja Silverman
. Approaches in philosophy and psychoanalysis fuelled feminist film criticism, feminist independent film and feminist distribution.
citation needed
It has been argued that there are two distinct approaches to independent, theoretically inspired feminist filmmaking. 'Deconstruction' concerns itself with analysing and breaking down codes of mainstream cinema, aiming to create a different relationship between the spectator and dominant cinema. The second approach, a feminist counterculture, embodies feminine writing to investigate a specifically feminine cinematic language.
253
Bracha L. Ettinger
invented a field of notions and concepts that serve the research of cinema from feminine perspective:
The Matrixial Gaze
254
255
Ettinger's language include original concepts to discover feminine perspectives.
256
Many writers in the fields of film theory and contemporary art
257
258
259
260
261
262
are using the Ettingerian matrixial sphere (matricial sphere).
263
During the 1930s–1950s heyday of the big Hollywood studios, the status of women in the industry was abysmal.
264
Since then female directors such as
Sally Potter
Catherine Breillat
Claire Denis
and
Jane Campion
have made art movies, and directors like
Kathryn Bigelow
and
Patty Jenkins
have had mainstream success. This progress stagnated in the 1990s, and men outnumber women five to one in behind the camera roles.
265
266
Politics
British-born suffragist
Rose Cohen
was executed in Stalin's
Great Terror
in 1937, two months after the execution of her Soviet husband.
Feminism had complex interactions with the major political movements of the 20th century.
Socialism
Main articles:
Left-wing politics § Social progressivism and counterculture
, and
Socialist feminism
Since the late 19th century, some feminists have allied with socialism, whereas others have criticized socialist ideology for being insufficiently concerned about women's rights.
August Bebel
, an early activist of the
German Social Democratic Party
(SPD), published his work
Die Frau und der Sozialismus
, juxtaposing the struggle for equal rights between sexes with social equality in general. In 1907 there was an
International Conference of Socialist Women
in
Stuttgart
where suffrage was described as a tool of class struggle.
Clara Zetkin
of the SPD called for women's suffrage to build a "socialist order, the only one that allows for a radical solution to the women's question".
267
268
In Britain, the women's movement was allied with the
Labour party
. In the U.S.,
Betty Friedan
emerged from a radical background to take leadership.
Radical Women
is the oldest socialist feminist organization in the U.S. and is still active.
269
During the
Spanish Civil War
Dolores Ibárruri
La Pasionaria
) led the
Communist Party of Spain
. Although she supported equal rights for women, she opposed women fighting on the front and clashed with the
anarcha-feminist
Mujeres Libres
270
Feminists in Ireland in the early 20th century included the
revolutionary
Irish Republican
suffragette
and
socialist
Constance Markievicz
, who in 1918 was the first woman elected to the
British House of Commons
. However, in line with Sinn Féin
abstentionist
policy, she would not take her seat in the House of Commons.
271
She was re-elected to the
Second Dáil
in the
elections of 1921
272
She was also a commander of the
Irish Citizens Army
, which was led by the socialist and self-described feminist Irish leader
James Connolly
, during the 1916
Easter Rising
273
Fascism
Further information:
Fascism and ideology
and
Women in Nazi Germany
Chilean feminists protest against the
regime of Augusto Pinochet
Fascism has been prescribed dubious stances on feminism by its practitioners and by women's groups. Amongst other demands concerning social reform presented in the
Fascist manifesto
in 1919 was expanding the suffrage to all Italian citizens of age 18 and above, including women (accomplished only in 1946, after the defeat of fascism) and eligibility for all to stand for office from age 25. This demand was particularly championed by special Fascist women's auxiliary groups such as the
fasci femminilli
and only partly realized in 1925, under pressure from dictator
Benito Mussolini
's more conservative coalition partners.
274
275
Cyprian Blamires states that although feminists were among those who opposed the rise of
Adolf Hitler
, feminism has a complicated relationship with the
Nazi
movement as well. While Nazis glorified traditional notions of patriarchal society and its role for women, they claimed to recognize women's equality in employment.
276
However, Hitler and Mussolini declared themselves as opposed to feminism,
276
and after the rise of
Nazism
in Germany in 1933, there was a rapid dissolution of the political rights and economic opportunities that feminists had fought for during the pre-war period and to some extent during the 1920s.
268
Georges Duby et al. write that in practice fascist society was hierarchical and emphasized male virility, with women maintaining a largely subordinate position.
268
Blamires also writes that
neofascism
has since the 1960s been hostile towards feminism and advocates that women accept "their traditional roles".
276
Civil rights movement and anti-racism
The
civil rights movement
has influenced and informed the feminist movement and vice versa. Many American feminists adapted the language and theories of black equality activism and drew parallels between women's rights and the rights of non-white people.
277
Despite the connections between the women's and civil rights movements, some tensions arose during the late 1960s and the 1970s as non-white women argued that feminism was predominantly white, straight, and middle class, and did not understand and was not concerned with issues of race and sexuality.
278
Similarly, some women argued that the civil rights movement had sexist and homophobic elements and did not adequately address minority women's concerns.
277
279
280
These criticisms created new feminist social theories about identity politics and the intersections of
racism
, classism, and sexism; they also generated new feminisms such as black feminism and
Chicana feminism
in addition to making large contributions to lesbian feminism and other integrations of
queer of color
identity.
281
282
283
Neoliberalism
Neoliberalism
has been criticized by feminist theory for having a negative effect on the female workforce population across the globe, especially in the global south. Masculinist assumptions and objectives continue to dominate economic and geopolitical thinking.
284
: 177
Women's experiences in non-industrialized countries reveal often deleterious effects of modernization policies and undercut orthodox claims that development benefits everyone.
284
: 175
Proponents of neoliberalism have theorized that by increasing women's participation in the workforce, there will be heightened economic progress, but feminist critics have stated that this participation alone does not further equality in gender relations.
285
: 186–98
Neoliberalism has failed to address significant problems such as the devaluation of feminized labor, the structural privileging of men and masculinity, and the politicization of women's subordination in the family and the workplace.
284
: 176
The "feminization of employment" refers to a conceptual characterization of deteriorated and devalorized labor conditions that are less desirable, meaningful, safe, and secure.
284
: 179
Employers in the global south have perceptions about feminine labor and seek workers who are perceived to be undemanding, docile and willing to accept low wages.
284
: 180
Social constructs about feminized labor have played a big part in this, for instance, employers often perpetuate ideas about women as "secondary" income earners to justify their lower rates of pay and not deserving of training or promotion.
285
: 189
Societal impact
Main article:
Feminist effects on society
The feminist movement has effected change in Western society, including women's suffrage; greater access to education; more equal payment to men; the right to initiate divorce proceedings; the right of women to make individual decisions regarding pregnancy (including access to contraceptives and abortion); and the right to own property.
13
Civil rights
Participation in the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women:
Signed and ratified
Acceded or succeeded
Unrecognized state, abiding by treaty
Only signed
Non-signatory
From the 1960s on, the campaign for women's rights
286
was met with mixed results
287
in the U.S. and the U.K. Other countries of the
EEC
agreed to ensure that discriminatory laws would be phased out across the European Community.
citation needed
Some feminist campaigning also helped reform attitudes to
child sexual abuse
. The view that young girls cause men to have sexual intercourse with them was replaced by that of men's responsibility for their own conduct, the men being adults.
288
In the U.S., the
National Organization for Women
(NOW) began in 1966 to seek women's equality, including through the
Equal Rights Amendment
(ERA),
289
which did not pass, although
some states enacted their own
. Reproductive rights in the U.S. centred on the court decision in
Roe
v.
Wade
enunciating a woman's right to choose whether to carry a pregnancy to term.
citation needed
The
division of labor
within households was affected by the increased entry of women into workplaces in the 20th century. Sociologist
Arlie Russell Hochschild
found that, in two-career couples, men and women, on average, spend about equal amounts of time working, but women still spend more time on housework,
290
291
although
Cathy Young
responded by arguing that women may prevent equal participation by men in housework and parenting.
292
Judith K. Brown writes, "Women are most likely to make a substantial contribution when subsistence activities have the following characteristics: the participant is not obliged to be far from home; the tasks are relatively monotonous and do not require rapt concentration and the work is not dangerous, can be performed in spite of interruptions, and is easily resumed once interrupted."
293
In international law, the
Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women
(CEDAW) is an international convention adopted by the
United Nations General Assembly
and described as an international
bill of rights
for women. It came into force in those nations ratifying it.
294
Jurisprudence
Main article:
Feminist legal theory
Feminist jurisprudence is a branch of
jurisprudence
that examines the relationship between women and law. It addresses questions about the history of legal and social biases against women and about the enhancement of their legal rights.
295
Feminist jurisprudence signifies a reaction to the
philosophical approach
of modern
legal scholars
, who typically see the law as a process for interpreting and perpetuating a society's universal, gender-neutral ideals. Feminist legal scholars claim that this fails to acknowledge women's values or legal interests or the harms that they may anticipate or experience.
296
Language
Further information:
Gender-neutral language in English
Proponents of gender-neutral language argue that the use of gender-specific language often implies male superiority or reflects an unequal state of society.
297
According to
The Handbook of English Linguistics
, generic masculine pronouns and gender-specific job titles are instances "where English linguistic convention has historically treated men as prototypical of the human species."
298
Merriam-Webster
chose "feminism" as its 2017 Word of the Year, noting that "Word of the Year is a quantitative measure of interest in a particular word."
299
Theology
See also:
Feminist theology
Gender of God
, and
Goddess movement
Cmdr. Adrienne Simmons speaking at the 2008 ceremony for the only women's mosque in
Khost City
, a symbol of progress for growing women's rights in the
Pashtun
belt
Feminist theology is a movement that reconsiders the traditions, practices, scriptures, and theologies of religions from a feminist perspective. Some of the goals of feminist theology include increasing the role of women among the clergy and religious authorities, reinterpreting male-dominated imagery and language about God, determining women's place in relation to career and motherhood, and studying images of women in the religion's sacred texts.
300
Christian feminism
is a branch of feminist theology which seeks to interpret and understand Christianity in light of the
equality
of
women
and men, and that this interpretation is necessary for a complete understanding of Christianity. While there is no standard set of beliefs among Christian feminists, most agree that God does not discriminate on the basis of sex, and are involved in issues such as the
ordination of women
, male dominance, and the balance of parenting in
Christian marriage
, claims of moral deficiency and inferiority of women compared to men, and the overall treatment of women in the church.
301
302
Islamic feminists
advocate women's rights, gender equality, and
social justice
grounded within an Islamic framework. Advocates seek to highlight the deeply rooted teachings of equality in the
Quran
and encourage a questioning of the patriarchal interpretation of Islamic teaching through the Quran,
hadith
(sayings of
Muhammad
), and
sharia
(law) towards the creation of a more equal and just society.
303
Although rooted in Islam, the movement's pioneers have also used
secular
and Western feminist discourses and recognize the role of Islamic feminism as part of an integrated global feminist movement.
304
Buddhist feminism
is a movement that seeks to improve the religious, legal, and
social status
of
women within Buddhism
. It is an aspect of
feminist theology
which seeks to advance and understand the equality of men and women morally, socially, spiritually, and in leadership from a Buddhist perspective. The Buddhist feminist
Rita Gross
describes Buddhist feminism as "the radical practice of the co-humanity of women and men".
305
Jewish feminism
is a movement that seeks to improve the religious, legal, and social status of
women
within Judaism and to open up new opportunities for religious experience and leadership for Jewish women. The main issues for early Jewish feminists in these movements were the exclusion from the all-male prayer group or
minyan
, the exemption from positive time-bound
mitzvot
, and women's inability to function as witnesses and to initiate
divorce
306
Many Jewish women have become leaders of feminist movements throughout their history.
307
Secular or
atheist feminists
have engaged in feminist criticism of religion, arguing that many religions have oppressive rules towards women and
misogynistic
themes and elements in religious texts.
308
309
310
Patriarchy
Main article:
Patriarchy
"Female Muslims- The tsar, beys and khans took your rights away" – Soviet poster issued in
Azerbaijan
, 1921
Patriarchy is a social system in which society is organized around male authority figures. In this system, fathers have authority over women, children, and property. It implies the institutions of male rule and privilege and is dependent on female subordination.
311
Most forms of feminism characterize patriarchy as an unjust social system that is oppressive to women.
Carole Pateman
argues that the patriarchal distinction "between masculinity and femininity is the political difference between freedom and subjection."
312
In
feminist theory
the concept of patriarchy often includes all the social mechanisms that reproduce and exert male dominance over women. Feminist theory typically characterizes patriarchy as a social construction, which can be overcome by revealing and critically analyzing its manifestations.
313
Some radical feminists have proposed that because patriarchy is too deeply rooted in society, separatism is the only viable solution.
314
Other feminists have criticized these views as being anti-men.
315
316
317
Men and masculinity
Main article:
Men and feminism
Feminist theory has explored the social construction of masculinity and its implications for the goal of gender equality. The social construct of masculinity is seen by feminism as problematic because it associates males with aggression and competition, and reinforces patriarchal and unequal gender relations.
98
318
Patriarchal cultures are criticized for "limiting forms of masculinity" available to men and thus narrowing their life choices.
319
Some feminists are engaged with men's issues activism, such as bringing attention to male rape and spousal battery and addressing negative social expectations for men.
320
321
322
Male participation in feminism is generally encouraged by feminists and is seen as an important strategy for achieving full societal commitment to gender equality.
14
323
324
Many male feminists and
pro-feminists
are active in both women's rights activism, feminist theory, and masculinity studies. However, some argue that while male engagement with feminism is necessary, it is problematic because of the ingrained social influences of patriarchy in gender relations.
325
The consensus today in feminist and masculinity theories is that men and women should cooperate to achieve the larger goals of feminism.
319
Reactions
Different groups of people have responded to feminism, and both men and women have been among its supporters and critics. Among American university students, for both men and women, support for feminist ideas is more common than self-identification as a feminist.
326
327
328
The US media tends to portray feminism negatively and feminists "are less often associated with day-to-day work/leisure activities of regular women".
329
330
However, as recent research has demonstrated, as people are exposed to self-identified feminists and to discussions relating to various forms of feminism, their own self-identification with feminism increases.
331
Pro-feminism
Main article:
Pro-feminism
Pro-feminism is the support of feminism without implying that the supporter is a member of the feminist movement. The term is most often used in reference to men who are actively supportive of feminism. The activities of pro-feminist men's groups include anti-violence work with boys and young men in schools, offering sexual harassment workshops in workplaces, running community education campaigns, and counselling male perpetrators of violence. Pro-feminist men also may be involved in men's health, activism against pornography including anti-pornography legislation,
men's studies
, and the development of gender equity curricula in schools. This work is sometimes in collaboration with feminists and women's services, such as domestic violence and rape crisis centres.
332
333
Criticism of feminism
Writers such as
Camille Paglia
Christina Hoff Sommers
Jean Bethke Elshtain
Elizabeth Fox-Genovese
, and
Daphne Patai
oppose some forms of feminism, though they identify as feminists. They argue, for example, that in some cases feminists promote
misandry
and elevate women's interests above men's, and criticize some feminist positions as harmful to both men and women.
334
A meta-analysis in 2023 published in the journal
Psychology of Women Quarterly
investigated the stereotype of feminists' attitudes to men and concluded that feminist views of men were no different to that of non-feminists or men towards men and titled the phenomenon the misandry myth, based on "evidence that it is false and widespread".
130
Anti-feminism
Main article:
Antifeminism
Anti-feminism is opposition to feminism in some or all of its forms.
335
In the 19th century, anti-feminism was mainly focused on opposition to women's suffrage. Later, opponents of women's entry into institutions of higher learning argued that education was too great a physical burden on women. Other anti-feminists opposed women's entry into the labour force, or their right to join unions, to sit on juries, or to obtain birth control and control of their sexuality.
336
Some people have opposed feminism on the grounds that they believe it is contrary to traditional values or religious beliefs. Some anti-feminists argue, for example, that social acceptance of divorce and non-married women is wrong and harmful, and that men and women are fundamentally different and thus their different traditional roles in society should be maintained.
337
338
339
failed verification
Other anti-feminists oppose women's entry into the workforce, political office, and the voting process, as well as the lessening of male authority in families.
340
341
Daphne Patai and
Noretta Koertge
argue that the term "anti-feminist" is used to silence academic debate about feminism.
342
343
Secular humanism
Secular humanism
is an ethical framework that attempts to dispense with any unreasoned dogma, pseudoscience, and superstition. Critics of feminism sometimes ask "Why feminism and not humanism?". Some humanists argue, however, that the goals of feminists and humanists largely overlap, and the distinction is only in motivation. For example, a humanist may consider abortion in terms of a utilitarian ethical framework, rather than considering the motivation of any particular woman in getting an abortion. In this respect, it is possible to be a humanist without being a feminist, but this does not preclude the existence of feminist humanism.
344
345
Humanism played a significant role in protofeminism during the Renaissance period in such that humanists made educated women popular figures despite the challenge of the patriarchal organization of society.
346
See also
Feminism portal
Decolonial feminism
– School of thought
Pages displaying short descriptions of redirect targets
Feminist peace research
Lesbian erasure
– Act of minimizing lesbian representation
Matrilineality
– Tracing of kinship through the female line
Men's rights movement
– Social advocacy movement
Straw feminism
– Distortion or fabrication of feminist arguments
References
Felder, Deborah G.
The American Women's Almanac: 500 Years of Making History
. United States: Visible Ink Press, 2020.
Davis, Ben.
Art in the After-Culture: Capitalist Crisis and Cultural Strategy
. United Kingdom: Haymarket Books, 2022.
Kelly, Jon (17 April 2012).
"Breivik: What's behind clenched-fist salutes?"
bbc.co.uk
. Retrieved
7 July
2018
Laura Brunell and
Elinor Burkett
Encyclopaedia Britannica
, 2019): "
Feminism
, the belief in social, economic, and political equality of the sexes."
Brunell, Laura;
Burkett, Elinor
(28 February 2024).
"Feminism"
Encyclopædia Britannica
Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc.
Archived
from the original on 7 March 2024
. Retrieved
10 March
2024
Feminism
, the belief in social, economic, and political equality of the sexes
Lengermann, Patricia; Niebrugge, Gillian (2010).
"Feminism"
. In Ritzer, G.; Ryan, J.M. (eds.).
The Concise Encyclopedia of Sociology
. John Wiley & Sons. p. 223.
ISBN
978-1-40-518353-6
Mendus, Susan
(2005) [1995]. "Feminism". In
Honderich, Ted
(ed.).
The Oxford Companion to Philosophy
(2nd ed.). Oxford University Press. pp.
291–
294.
ISBN
978-0-19-926479-7
Hawkesworth, Mary E. (2006).
Globalization and Feminist Activism
. Rowman & Littlefield. pp.
25–
27.
ISBN
978-0-7425-3783-5
Beasley, Chris
(1999).
What Is Feminism?
. New York: SAGE. pp.
3–
11.
ISBN
978-0-7619-6335-6
Gamble, Sarah (2001) [1998]. "Introduction".
The Routledge Companion to Feminism and Postfeminism
. Routledge. pp. VII.
ISBN
978-0-415-24310-0
Echols, Alice
(1989).
Daring to Be Bad: Radical Feminism in America, 1967–1975
. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press.
ISBN
978-0-8166-1787-6
Roberts, Jacob (2017).
"Women's Work"
Distillations
. Vol. 3, no. 1. pp.
6–
11
. Retrieved
22 March
2018
Messer-Davidow, Ellen (2002).
Disciplining Feminism: From Social Activism to Academic Discourse
. Durham, N.C.: Duke University Press.
ISBN
978-0-8223-2843-8
hooks, bell
(2000).
Feminism Is for Everybody: Passionate Politics
. Cambridge, Mass.: South End Press.
ISBN
978-0-89608-629-6
Chodorow, Nancy (1989).
Feminism and Psychoanalytic Theory
. New Haven, Conn.: Yale University Press.
ISBN
978-0-300-05116-2
Gilligan, Carol (1977). "In a Different Voice: Women's Conceptions of Self and of Morality".
Harvard Educational Review
47
(4):
481–
517.
doi
10.17763/haer.47.4.g6167429416hg5l0
Artwińska, Anna; Mrozik, Agnieszka, eds. (2020).
Gender, Generations, and Communism in Central and Eastern Europe and Beyond
doi
10.4324/9780367823528
ISBN
978-0-367-82352-8
page needed
Maynard, Mary (1995).
"Beyond the 'Big Three': The Development of Feminist Theory into the 1990s"
Women's History Review
(3):
259–
281.
doi
10.1080/09612029500200089
"LGBTIQ+ communities and the anti-rights pushback: 5 things to know"
UN Women
. Retrieved
28 February
2026
"Feminist organizations and academic communities stand together for an inclusive feminism"
. Inkluderende feminisme
. Retrieved
28 February
2026
Weedon, Chris (2002).
"Key Issues in Postcolonial Feminism: A Western Perspective"
Gender Forum
(1). Archived from
the original
on 3 December 2013.
M Wollstoncraft,
A Vindication of the Rights of Woman
(1792)
ch VII
, "From the respect paid to property flow, as from a poisoned fountain, most of the evils and vices which render this world such a dreary scene to the contemplative mind."
Mary Wollstonecraft, Pedagogy, and the Practice of Feminism
. Routledge. 18 July 2013.
ISBN
978-1-136-75303-9
Vindication: A Life of Mary Wollstonecraft
. Harper Collins. 17 March 2009.
ISBN
978-0-06-186600-5
"The Original Suffragette: The Extraordinary Mary Wollstonecraft"
TheGuardian.com
. 5 October 2015.
"Feminism in the 18th century and beyond"
Goldstein, Leslie F. (1982). "Early Feminist Themes in French Utopian Socialism: The St.-Simonians And Fourier".
Journal of the History of Ideas
43
(1):
91–
108.
doi
10.2307/2709162
JSTOR
2709162
"Féminisme : Appelation D'origine - Vacarme"
vacarme.org
(in French). 2 September 1997
. Retrieved
7 August
2024
Fayolle, Caroline (2018).
"Des corps « monstres ». Historique du stigmate féministe"
['Monstrous' Bodies. History of the Feminist Stigma].
Glad!
(in French) (4).
doi
10.4000/glad.1034
Grever, Maria (1994). "Dutch feminist pioneer
Mina Kruseman
in a letter to Alexandre Dumas".
Strijd Tegen De Stilte. Johanna Naber (1859–1941) En De Vrouwenstem in Geschiedenis
(in Dutch). Hilversum Verloren. p. 31.
ISBN
978-90-6550-395-4
Offen, Karen (1987). "Sur L'origine Des Mots 'Féminisme' Et 'Féministe'
".
Revue d'histoire moderne et contemporaine
34
(3):
492–
96.
doi
10.3406/rhmc.1987.1421
JSTOR
20529317
Cott, Nancy F.
(1987).
The Grounding of Modern Feminism
. New Haven: Yale University Press. p.
13
ISBN
978-0-300-04228-3
"Feminism"
Oxford English Dictionary
(3rd ed.).
Oxford University Press
. 2012.
Advocacy of equality of the sexes and the establishment of the political, social, and economic rights of the female sex; the movement associated with this.
Spender, Dale (1983).
There's Always Been a Women's Movement This Century
. London: Pandora Press. pp.
–200.
ISBN
978-0-86358-002-4
Lerner, Gerda (1993).
The Creation of Feminist Consciousness From the Middle Ages to Eighteen-Seventy
. Oxford University Press. pp.
–20.
Walters, Margaret (2005).
Feminism: A Very Short Introduction
. Oxford University Press. pp.
1–176
ISBN
978-0-19-280510-2
Kinnaird, Joan; Astell, Mary (1983).
"Inspired by ideas (1668–1731)"
. In Spender, Dale (ed.).
There's Always Been a Women's Movement
. London: Pandora Press. pp. 29–.
ISBN
978-0-86358-002-4
Witt, Charlotte (2006).
"Feminist History of Philosophy"
Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy
. Retrieved
23 January
2012
Allen, Ann Taylor (1999). "Feminism, Social Science, And the Meanings of Modernity: The Debate on the Origin of the Family in Europe and the United States, 1860–1914".
The American Historical Review
104
(4):
1085–
113.
doi
10.1086/ahr/104.4.1085
JSTOR
2649562
PMID
19291893
Botting, Eileen Hunt; Houser, Sarah L. (2006). "
'Drawing the Line of Equality': Hannah Mather Crocker on Women's Rights".
American Political Science Review
100
(2):
265–
278.
doi
10.1017/S0003055406062150
Humm, Maggie (1995).
The Dictionary of Feminist Theory
. Columbus:
Ohio State University Press
. p. 251.
ISBN
978-0-13-355389-5
Walker, Rebecca (January–February 1992). "Becoming the Third Wave".
Ms.
pp.
39–
41.
Chamberlain, Prudence (2017).
The Feminist Fourth Wave
doi
10.1007/978-3-319-53682-8
ISBN
978-3-319-53681-1
page needed
Kroløkke, Charlotte; Sørensen, Anne Scott (2006). "Three Waves of Feminism: From Suffragettes to GRRLS".
Gender Communication Theories & Analyses: From Silence to Performance Gender communication theories & analyses: From silence to performance
. pp.
1–
24.
doi
10.4135/9781452233086.n1
ISBN
978-0-7619-2918-5
"Feminism - The Fourth Wave of Feminism"
Britannica
. Retrieved
29 November
2021
"Feminism: The Fourth Wave"
Encyclopedia Britannica
. Archived from
the original
on 4 August 2019
. Retrieved
21 May
2019
Wroath, John (1998).
Until They Are Seven, The Origins of Women's Legal Rights
. Waterside Press.
ISBN
978-1-872870-57-1
Mitchell, L. G. (1997).
Lord Melbourne, 1779–1848
. Oxford University Press.
Perkins, Jane Gray (1909).
The Life of the Honourable Mrs. Norton
. John Murray.
"Married Women's Property Act 1882"
legislation.gov.uk
. UK Government. 1882
. Retrieved
17 April
2017
Freedman, Estelle B. (2003).
No Turning Back: The History of Feminism and the Future of Women
. Ballantine Books. p.
464
ISBN
978-0-345-45053-1
"Votes for Women Electoral Commission"
. Elections New Zealand. 13 April 2005. Archived from
the original
on 14 September 2013
. Retrieved
31 March
2013
"Women and the Right to Vote in Australia"
. Australian Electoral Commission. 28 January 2011
. Retrieved
26 April
2013
Phillips, Melanie (2004).
The Ascent of Woman: A History of the Suffragette Movement and the Ideas Behind It
. London: Abacus. pp.
1–
370.
ISBN
978-0-349-11660-0
Warner, Marina (14 June 1999).
"Emmeline Pankhurst – Time 100 People of the Century"
Time
. Archived from
the original
on 6 March 2008.
Ruether, Rosemary Radford (2012).
Women and Redemption: A Theological History
(2nd ed.). Minneapolis: Fortress Press. pp.
112–
18,
136–
39.
ISBN
978-0-8006-9816-4
Weyler, Karen A. (2012). "John Neal and the Early Discourse of American Women's Rights". In Watts, Edward; Carlson, David J. (eds.).
John Neal and Nineteenth Century American Literature and Culture
. Lewisburg, Pennsylvania: Bucknell University Press. p. 227.
ISBN
978-1-61148-420-5
DuBois, Ellen Carol (1997).
Harriot Stanton Blatch and the Winning of Woman Suffrage
. New Haven, Conn.: Yale University Press.
ISBN
978-0-300-06562-6
Flexner, Eleanor (1996).
Century of Struggle: The Woman's Rights Movement in the United States
. The Belknap Press. pp.
xxviii–xxx
ISBN
978-0-674-10653-6
Wheeler, Marjorie W. (1995).
One Woman, One Vote: Rediscovering the Woman Suffrage Movement
. Troutdale, Ore.: NewSage Press. p.
127
ISBN
978-0-939165-26-1
Stevens, Doris; O'Hare, Carol (1995).
Jailed for Freedom: American Women Win the Vote
. Troutdale, Ore.: NewSage Press. pp.
1–388
ISBN
978-0-939165-25-4
Kaplan, Temma (1985). "On the Socialist Origins of International Women's Day".
Feminist Studies
11
(1):
163–
171.
doi
10.2307/3180144
JSTOR
3180144
"History of International Women's Day"
. United Nations
. Retrieved
26 May
2012
Ko, Dorothy; Haboush, JaHyun Kim; Piggott, Joan R. (2003).
Women and Confucian Cultures in Premodern China, Korea, And Japan
. University of California Press.
ISBN
978-0-520-23138-2
page needed
Ma, Yuxin (2010).
Women Journalists and Feminism in China, 1898–1937
. Cambria Press.
ISBN
978-1-60497-660-1
page needed
Farris, Catherine S.; Lee, Anru; Rubinstein, Murray A. (2004).
Women in the New Taiwan: Gender Roles and Gender Consciousness in a Changing Society
. M.E. Sharpe.
ISBN
978-0-7656-0814-7
page needed
Dooling, Amy D. (2005).
Women's Literary Feminism in 20th-Century China
. Macmillan.
ISBN
978-1-4039-6733-6
page needed
Stange, Mary Zeiss; Oyster, Carol K.; Sloan, Jane E. (2011).
Encyclopedia of Women in Today's World
. SAGE. pp.
79–
81.
ISBN
978-1-4129-7685-5
Golley, Nawar Al-Hassan (2003).
Reading Arab Women's Autobiographies: Shahrazad Tells Her Story
. University of Texas Press. pp.
30–
50.
ISBN
978-0-292-70545-6
Ettehadieh, Mansoureh
(2004).
"The Origins and Development of the Women's Movement in Iran, 1906–41"
. In Beck, Lois; Nashat, Guity (eds.).
Women in Iran from 1800 to the Islamic Republic
. University of Illinois Press. pp.
85–
106.
ISBN
978-0-252-07189-8
Gheytanchi, Elham (2000).
"Chronology of Events Regarding Women in Iran since the Revolution of 1979"
. In Mack, Arien (ed.).
Iran Since the Revolution
. Social Research, Volume 67, No. 2.
Bard, Christine (May–June 2007).
"Les Premières Femmes Au Gouvernement (France, 1936–1981)"
[First Women in Government (France, 1936–1981)].
Histoire@Politique
(in French).
(1): 2.
doi
10.3917/hp.001.0002
Zivkovic, Olivera (7 February 2021).
"Switzerland Marks 50 Years of Women Voting"
dw.com
. Retrieved
16 November
2022
"United Nations Press Release of a Meeting of the Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW)"
. United Nations. 14 January 2003. Archived from
the original
on 27 January 2012
. Retrieved
2 September
2011
Bro, Alexandra (27 August 2020).
"Commemorating the Nineteenth Amendment: Women's Suffrage at Home and Abroad"
Council on Foreign Relations
. Retrieved
16 November
2022
Guillaumin, Colette (1994).
Racism, Sexism, Power, And Ideology
. pp.
193–
195.
Meltzer, Françoise (1995).
Hot Property: The Stakes and Claims of Literary Originality
. p. 88.
Allison, Julie A. (1995).
Rape: The Misunderstood Crime
. p. 89.
Bland, Lucy (2002).
Banishing the Beast: Feminism, Sex and Morality
. I. B. Tauris. pp.
135–
149.
ISBN
978-1-86064-681-2
. Retrieved
25 August
2013
Palczewski, Catherine Helen (1995). "Voltairine de Cleyre: Sexual Slavery and Sexual Pleasure in the Nineteenth Century".
NWSA Journal
(3):
54–
68.
JSTOR
4316402
Crowell, Nancy A.; Burgess, Ann W. (1997).
Understanding Violence Against Women
. p. 127.
Bergoffen, Debra (16 August 2010) [17 August 2004].
"Simone De Beauvoir"
Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy
. Metaphysics Research Lab, CSLI, Stanford University.
Whelehan, Imelda (1995).
Modern Feminist Thought: From the Second Wave to 'Post-Feminism'
. Edinburgh University Press. pp.
25–43
ISBN
978-0-7486-0621-4
Hanisch, Carol (1 January 2006).
"Hanisch, New Intro to 'The Personal Is Political' – Second Wave and Beyond"
The Personal Is Political
. Archived from
the original
on 15 May 2008
. Retrieved
8 June
2008
Badran, Margot (1996).
Feminists, Islam, And Nation: Gender and the Making of Modern Egypt
. Princeton University Press.
ISBN
978-0-691-02605-3
page needed
Smith, Bonnie G. (2000).
Global Feminisms Since 1945
. Psychology Press.
ISBN
978-0-415-18491-5
"Islamic Feminism Means Justice to Women"
The Mili Gazette
Archived
from the original on 21 August 2013
. Retrieved
31 March
2013
Parpart, Jane L.; Connelly, M. Patricia; Connelly, Patricia; Barriteau, V. Eudine; Barriteau, Eudine (2000).
Theoretical Perspectives on Gender and Development
. Ottawa: International Development Research Centre. p. 215.
ISBN
978-0-88936-910-8
Fox, Margalit
(5 February 2006).
"Betty Friedan, Who Ignited Cause in 'Feminine Mystique,' Dies at 85"
The New York Times
Archived
from the original on 24 November 2021
. Retrieved
19 February
2017
Hunt, Michael (2016).
The World Transformed: 1945 to the Present
. New York: Oxford University Press. pp.
220–
223.
ISBN
978-0-19-937102-0
"What Germaine Greer and The Female Eunuch Mean to Me"
The Guardian
. 26 January 2014
. Retrieved
16 January
2023
"Friday Essay: The Female Eunuch at 50, Germaine Greer's Fearless, Feminist Masterpiece"
The Conversation
. 9 October 2020
. Retrieved
16 January
2023
Piepmeier, Alison (2009).
Girl Zines: Making Media, Doing Feminism
. New York: New York University Press. p. 45.
ISBN
978-0-8147-6773-3
Feliciano, Steve (19 June 2013).
"The Riot Grrrl Movement"
. New York Public Library.
Archived
from the original on 18 September 2013.
The emergence of the Riot Grrrl movement began in the early 1990s, when a group of women in Olympia, Washington, held a meeting to discuss how to address sexism in the punk scene. The women decided they wanted to start a 'girl riot' against a society they felt offered no validation of women's experiences. And thus the Riot Grrrl movement was born.
Walker, Rebecca
(January 1992).
"Becoming the Third Wave"
(PDF)
Ms
. pp.
39–
41. Archived from
the original
(PDF)
on 15 January 2017
. Retrieved
21 February
2018
Baumgardner, Jennifer
Richards, Amy
(2000).
Manifesta: Young Women, Feminism, And the Future
. New York:
Farrar, Straus and Giroux
. p.
77
ISBN
978-0-374-52622-1
Henry, Astrid (2004).
Not My Mother's Sister: Generational Conflict and Third-Wave Feminism
. Bloomington: Indiana University Press. pp.
1–
288.
ISBN
978-0-253-21713-4
Gillis, Stacy; Howie, Gillian; Munford, Rebecca (2007).
Third Wave Feminism: A Critical Exploration
. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan. pp. xxviii,
275–
76.
ISBN
978-0-230-52174-2
Faludi, Susan
(1992).
Backlash: The Undeclared War Against Women
. London: Vintage.
ISBN
978-0-09-922271-2
page needed
Walker, Alice (1983).
In Search of Our Mothers' Gardens: Womanist Prose
. San Diego: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich. p.
397
ISBN
978-0-15-144525-7
Leslie, Heywood; Drake, Jennifer (1997).
Third Wave Agenda: Being Feminist, Doing Feminism
. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press.
ISBN
978-0-8166-3005-9
page needed
Gilligan, Carol
(1993).
In a Different Voice: Psychological Theory and Women's Development
. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press. p.
184
ISBN
978-0-674-44544-4
"standpoint theory | feminism"
Encyclopædia Britannica
. Retrieved
10 February
2016
Hill Collins, P. (2000).
Black Feminist Thought: Knowledge, Consciousness, And the Politics of Empowerment
. New York: Routledge. pp.
–335.
Harding, Sandra
(2003).
The Feminist Standpoint Theory Reader: Intellectual and Political Controversies
. London: Routledge. pp.
1–
16,
67–
80.
ISBN
978-0-415-94501-1
Cochrane, Kira
(10 December 2013).
"The Fourth Wave of Feminism: Meet the Rebel Women"
The Guardian
Archived
from the original on 10 December 2013.
"Feminism: A Fourth Wave? | The Political Studies Association (PSA)"
Feminism: A fourth wave? | The Political Studies Association (PSA)
. Archived from
the original
on 10 December 2019
. Retrieved
29 November
2021
Chamberlain 2017
, p. 115.
Solomon, Deborah (13 November 2009).
"The Blogger and Author on the Life of Women Online"
The New York Times Magazine
Archived
from the original on 1 May 2018
. Retrieved
16 March
2016
Zerbisias, Antonia (16 September 2015).
"Feminism's Fourth Wave Is the Shitlist"
NOW Toronto
Archived
from the original on 17 August 2020
. Retrieved
21 April
2016
For Cosby, Ghomeshi, #MeToo, and fourth wave, see Matheson, Kelsey (17 October 2017).
"You Said #MeToo. Now What Are We Going To Do About It?"
The Huffington Post
For Savile and fourth wave, see
Chamberlain 2017
, pp. 114–115
For page three, Thorpe, Vanessa (27 July 2013).
"What now for Britain's new-wave feminists – after page 3 and £10 notes?"
The Guardian
For Isla Vista killings, see
Bennett, Jessica (10 September 2014).
"Behold the Power of #Hashtag Feminism"
Time
. Archived from
the original
on 18 January 2018
. Retrieved
17 November
2024
Zacharek, Stephanie; Dockterman, Eliana; Sweetland Edwards, Haley (6 December 2017).
"TIME Person of the Year 2017: The Silence Breakers"
Time
. Archived from
the original
on 19 March 2018
. Retrieved
26 September
2024
Redden, Molly (6 December 2017).
"#MeToo movement named Time magazine's Person of the Year"
The Guardian
. Retrieved
7 October
2024
Lugones, Marìa (2010). "Toward a Decolonial Feminism".
Hypatia
25
(4):
742–
759.
doi
10.1111/j.1527-2001.2010.01137.x
Bodenhorn, Barbara (2013). "Inherit My Heaven: Kalaallit Gender Relations, by Karla Jessen Williamson".
Arctic
66
(4).
doi
10.14430/arctic4336
Kuokkanen, Rauna (2019).
Restructuring Relations
doi
10.1093/oso/9780190913281.001.0001
ISBN
978-0-19-091328-1
page needed
Wright, Elizabeth (2000).
Lacan and Postfeminism (Postmodern Encounters)
. Totem Books.
ISBN
978-1-84046-182-4
Abbott, Pamela; Tyler, Melissa; Wallace, Claire (2005).
An Introduction to Sociology: Feminist Perspectives
(3rd ed.). Routledge. p.
xi
ISBN
978-1-134-38245-3
Mateo–Gomez, Tatiana (2009). "Feminist Criticism". In Richter, William L. (ed.).
Approaches to Political Thought
. Rowman & Littlefield. p.
279
ISBN
978-1-4616-3656-4
Jones, Amelia (1994). "Postfeminism, Feminist Pleasures, and Embodied Theories of Art". In Frueh, Joana; Langer, Cassandra L.; Raven, Arlene (eds.).
New Feminist Criticism: Art, Identity, Action
. New York: HarperCollins. pp.
16–
41, 20.
Chunn, Dorothy E. (2008). "
'Take It Easy Girls': Feminism, Equality, and Social Change in the Media".
Reaction and Resistance
. pp.
31–
64.
doi
10.59962/9780774855549-003
ISBN
978-0-7748-5554-9
Zajko, Vanda; Leonard, Miriam, eds. (2008).
Laughing with Medusa
doi
10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199237944.001.0001
ISBN
978-0-19-923794-4
page needed
Howe, Mica; Aguiar, Sarah Appleton (2001).
He Said, She Says: An RSVP To the Male Text
. Madison, N.J.: Fairleigh Dickinson University Press. p. 292.
ISBN
978-0-8386-3915-3
Pollock, Griselda (2007).
Encounters in the Virtual Feminist Museum: Time, Space and the Archive
. Routledge.
ISBN
978-0-415-41374-9
Ettinger, Bracha
Judith Butler
; Brian Massumi; Griselda Pollock (2006).
The Matrixial Borderspace
. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press. p. 245.
ISBN
978-0-8166-3587-0
Brabeck, Mary; Brown, Laura (1997). "Feminist theory and psychological practice".
Shaping the future of feminist psychology: Education, research, and practice
. pp.
15–
35.
doi
10.1037/10245-001
ISBN
1-55798-448-4
Florence, Penny; Foster, Nicola (2001).
Differential Aesthetics: Art Practices, Philosophy and Feminist Understandings
. Aldershot, Hants, England: Ashgate. p. 360.
ISBN
978-0-7546-1493-7
Showalter, Elaine
(1979).
"Towards a Feminist Poetics"
. In Jacobus, M. (ed.).
Women Writing About Women
. Croom Helm. pp.
25–36
ISBN
978-0-85664-745-1
Ettinger, Bracha (2006).
The matrixial borderspace
. Theory out of bounds. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press.
ISBN
978-0-8166-3586-3
OCLC
62177997
Kristeva, Julia;
Moi, Toril
(1986).
The Kristeva Reader
. New York: Columbia University Press. p. 328.
ISBN
978-0-231-06325-8
Hopkins-Doyle, Aífe; et al. (2024).
"The Misandry Myth: An Inaccurate Stereotype About Feminists' Attitudes Toward Men"
Psychology of Women Quarterly
48
8–
37.
doi
10.1177/03616843231202708
Voet, Rian (1998). "Categorizations of feminism".
Feminism and Citizenship
. SAGE. p. 25.
ISBN
978-1-4462-2804-3
Lindsey, Linda L. (2015).
Gender Roles: A Sociological Perspective
. Routledge. p. 17.
ISBN
978-1-317-34808-5
West, Rebecca.
"Kinds of Feminism"
. University of Alabama in Huntsville. Archived from
the original
on 10 September 2019
. Retrieved
28 October
2020
Marilley, Suzanne M. (1996).
Woman Suffrage and the Origins of Liberal Feminism in the United States, 1820–1920
. Harvard University Press.
ISBN
978-0-674-95465-6
"Hvem Vi Er"
. Norwegian Association for Women's Rights
. Retrieved
28 October
2020
Wendell, Susan (1987). "A (Qualified) Defense of Liberal Feminism".
Hypatia
(2):
65–
93.
doi
10.1111/j.1527-2001.1987.tb01066.x
Griffiths, Morwenna (1995). "Making a Difference: Feminism, post-modernism and the methodology of educational research".
British Educational Research Journal
21
(2):
219–
235.
doi
10.1080/0141192950210207
Mahowald, Mary Briody (1999). "Different Versions of Feminism".
Genes, Women, Equality
. Oxford University Press. p. 145.
Rottenberg, Catherine (2014). "The Rise of Neoliberal Feminism".
Cultural Studies
28
(3):
418–
437.
doi
10.1080/09502386.2013.857361
Zhang, Yiyue; Rios, Kimberly (2022). "Understanding Perceptions of Radical and Liberal Feminists: The Nuanced Roles of Warmth and Competence".
Sex Roles
86
3–
4):
143–
158.
doi
10.1007/s11199-021-01257-y
"Liberal Feminism"
Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy
. Metaphysics Research Lab, Stanford University. 2018.
Hennessy, Rosemary; Ingraham, Chrys (1997).
Materialist Feminism: A Reader in Class, Difference, And Women's Lives
. London: Routledge. pp.
1–
13.
ISBN
978-0-415-91634-9
Bottomore, T.B. (1991).
A Dictionary of Marxist Thought
. Wiley-Blackwell. p. 215.
ISBN
978-0-631-18082-1
Barbara Ehrenreich (1976).
"What Is Socialist Feminism?"
. feministezine.com
. Retrieved
3 December
2011
Dunbar-Ortiz, Roxanne (2002).
Quiet Rumours
. AK Press. pp.
11–
13.
ISBN
978-1-902593-40-1
Biehl, Janet
(1991).
Rethinking Eco-Feminist Politics
. Cambridge, Mass.:
South End Press
ISBN
978-0-89608-392-9
Ahmed, Sarta (2000).
Transformations: Thinking Through Feminism
. London: Routledge. p. 111.
ISBN
978-0-415-22066-8
Narayan, Uma (1997).
Dislocating Cultures: Identities, Traditions, And Third-World Feminism
. New York: Routledge. pp.
20–
28, 113,
161–
87.
ISBN
978-0-415-91418-5
Ogunyemi, Chikwenye Okonjo (1985). "Womanism: The Dynamics of the Contemporary Black Female Novel in English".
Signs
11
(1):
63–
80.
doi
10.1086/494200
JSTOR
3174287
Kolawole, Mary Ebun Modupe (1997).
Womanism and African Consciousness
. Trenton, N.J.: Africa World Press. p. 216.
ISBN
978-0-86543-540-7
Obianuju Acholonu, Catherine (1995).
Motherism: The Afrocentric Alternative to Feminism
. Afa Publ. p. 144.
ISBN
978-978-31997-1-2
Ogundipe-Leslie, Molara (1994).
Re-Creating Ourselves: African Women & Critical Transformations
. Africa World Press. p.
262
ISBN
978-0-86543-412-7
Nnaemeka, Obioma (1995). "Feminism, Rebellious Women, And Cultural Boundaries: Rereading Flora Nwapa and Her Compatriots".
Research in African Literatures
26
(2):
80–
113.
JSTOR
3820273
Hudson-Weems, Clenora (1994).
Africana Womanism: Reclaiming Ourselves
. Troy, Mich.: Bedford Publishers. p. 158.
ISBN
978-0-911557-11-4
Butler, Judith
(1999) [1990].
Gender Trouble: Feminism and the Subversion of Identity
. New York: Routledge.
ISBN
978-0-415-92499-3
West, Candace; Zimmerman, Don H. (1987). "Doing Gender".
Gender & Society
(2):
125–
151.
doi
10.1177/0891243287001002002
JSTOR
189945
Benhabib, Seyla (2013).
"From Identity Politics to Social Feminism: A Plea for the Nineties"
. In Trend, David (ed.).
Radical Democracy
. pp.
27–
41.
doi
10.4324/9781315021959
ISBN
978-1-315-02195-9
Randall, Vicky (2010).
"Feminism"
. In Marsh, David; Stoker, Gerry (eds.).
Theory and methods in political science
(3rd ed.). Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan. p. 116.
ISBN
978-0-230-57627-8
permanent dead link
Abbott, Pamela; Wallace, Claire; Tyler, Melissa (2005).
"Feminist knowledge"
An Introduction to Sociology: Feminist Perspectives
(3rd ed.). London: Routledge. p. 380.
ISBN
978-0-415-31259-2
Citing
Yeatman, Anna (1994).
"The epistemological politics of postmodern feminist theorizing"
Postmodern Revisionings of the Political
. New York: Routledge. pp.
15–22
ISBN
978-0-415-90198-7
Grady, Constance (20 June 2018).
"The Waves of Feminism, And Why People Keep Fighting over Them, Explained"
Vox
Archived
from the original on 5 April 2019
. Retrieved
26 April
2019
"Why Transphobia Is a Feminist Issue"
National Organization for Women
. 8 September 2014
. Retrieved
24 November
2021
"NOW Celebrates International Transgender Day of Visibility"
National Organization for Women
. 31 March 2021
. Retrieved
24 November
2021
Platt, Lisa F.; Szoka, Spring L. (2021). "Endorsement of Feminist Beliefs, Openness, and Mindful Acceptance as Predictors of Decreased Transphobia".
Journal of Homosexuality
68
(2):
185–
202.
doi
10.1080/00918369.2019.1651109
PMID
31411935
Conlin, Sarah E.; Douglass, Richard P.; Moscardini, Emma H. (2021). "Predicting transphobia among cisgender women and men: The roles of feminist identification and gender conformity".
Journal of Gay & Lesbian Mental Health
25
5–
19.
doi
10.1080/19359705.2020.1780535
Brassel, Sheila T.; Anderson, Veanne N. (2020). "Who Thinks Outside the Gender Box? Feminism, Gender Self-Esteem, and Attitudes toward Trans People".
Sex Roles
82
7–
8):
447–
462.
doi
10.1007/s11199-019-01066-4
MacDonald, Terry (16 February 2015).
"Are You Now or Have You Ever Been a TERF?"
New Statesman America
Archived
from the original on 14 April 2019
. Retrieved
13 April
2019
Zanghellini, Aleardo (2020).
"Philosophical Problems with the Gender-Critical Feminist Argument Against Trans Inclusion"
SAGE Open
10
(2) 2158244020927029.
doi
10.1177/2158244020927029
"A Backlash Against Gender Ideology Is Starting in Universities"
Economist
. 5 June 2021
. Retrieved
6 June
2021
Gordon, Tom (10 June 2021).
"Woman Accused of Transphobia Wins Landmark Employment Case"
HeraldScotland
. Retrieved
10 June
2021
Faulkner, Doug (10 June 2021).
"Maya Forstater: Woman Wins Tribunal Appeal over Transgender Tweets"
BBC News
. Retrieved
10 June
2021
Ms Forstater ... claimed she was discriminated against because of her beliefs, which include 'that sex is immutable and not to be conflated with gender identity'. ... But the Honourable Mr Justice Choudhury said her 'gender-critical beliefs' did fall under the Equalities Act as they 'did not seek to destroy the rights of trans persons'.
Observer editorial (27 June 2021).
"The Observer View on the Right to Free Expression"
Observer
. Retrieved
27 June
2021
'Gender-critical' beliefs refer to the view that someone's sex – whether they are male or female – is biological and immutable and cannot be conflated with someone's gender identity, whether they identify as a man or a woman. The belief that the patriarchal oppression of women is grounded partly in their biological sex, not just the social expression of gender, and that women therefore have the right to certain single-sex spaces and to organise on the basis of biological sex if they so wish, represents a long-standing strand of feminist thinking. Other feminists disagree, believing that gender identity supersedes biological sex altogether.
Flaherty, Colleen (29 August 2018).
'TERF' War"
Inside Higher Ed
Archived
from the original on 7 April 2019
. Retrieved
12 April
2019
Miller, Edie (5 November 2018).
"Why Is British Media So Transphobic?"
The Outline
Archived
from the original on 19 October 2019
. Retrieved
3 May
2019
The truth is, while the British conservative right would almost certainly be more than happy to whip up a frenzy of transphobia, they simply haven't needed to, because some sections of the left over here are doing their hate-peddling for them. The most vocal source of this hatred has emerged, sadly, from within circles of radical feminists. British feminism has an increasingly notorious TERF problem.
Dastagir, Alia (16 March 2017).
"A Feminist Glossary Because We Didn't All Major in Gender Studies"
USA Today
Archived
from the original on 20 July 2019
. Retrieved
24 April
2019
TERF: The acronym for 'trans exclusionary radical feminists,' referring to feminists who are transphobic.
Lewis, Sophie (7 February 2019).
"Opinion | How British Feminism Became Anti-Trans"
The New York Times
Archived
from the original on 15 November 2019
. Retrieved
5 May
2019
Taylor, Jeff (23 October 2017).
"The Christian Right's New Strategy: Divide and Conquer the LGBT Community"
www.lgbtqnation.com
Archived
from the original on 22 September 2019
. Retrieved
9 May
2019
Rowe-Finkbeiner, Kristin (2004).
The F-Word: Feminism In Jeopardy – Women, Politics and the Future
. Seal Press.
ISBN
978-1-58005-114-9
Rosenberg, Jessica; Garofalo, Gitana (1998). "Riot GRRRL: Revolutions from within".
Signs
23
(3):
809–
841.
doi
10.1086/495289
JSTOR
3175311
Code, Lorraine (2004).
Encyclopedia of Feminist Theories
. London: Routledge. p.
560
ISBN
978-0-415-30885-4
Scanlon, Jennifer (2009).
Bad Girls Go Everywhere: The Life of Helen Gurley Brown
. Oxford University Press. pp.
94–111
ISBN
978-0-19-534205-5
Hollows, Joanne; Moseley, Rachel (2006).
Feminism in Popular Culture
. Berg Publishers. p. 84.
ISBN
978-1-84520-223-1
Clark, Julia (2014).
"Can Men Be Feminists Too? Half (48%) of Men in 15 Country Survey Seem to Think So"
. Retrieved
26 August
2016
Harnois, Catherine E. (October 2012). "Sociological Research on Feminism and the Women's Movement: Ideology, Identity, And Practice".
Sociology Compass
(10):
823–
832.
doi
10.1111/j.1751-9020.2012.00484.x
Allum, Cynthia (9 April 2015).
"82 Percent of Americans Don't Consider Themselves Feminists, Poll Shows"
The New York Times
. Archived from
the original
on 28 August 2016
. Retrieved
26 August
2016
Harnois, Catherine E. (2015). "Race, Ethnicity, Sexuality, and Women's Political Consciousness of Gender".
Social Psychology Quarterly
78
(4):
365–
386.
doi
10.1177/0190272515607844
Harnois, Catherine E. (2017). "Intersectional Masculinities and Gendered Political Consciousness: How do Race, Ethnicity and Sexuality Shape Men's Awareness of Gender Inequality and Support for Gender Activism?".
Sex Roles
77
3–
4):
141–
154.
doi
10.1007/s11199-016-0702-2
"Attitudes to Gender in 2016 Britain – 8,000 Sample Study for Fawcett Society"
Survation
. 18 January 2016
. Retrieved
28 June
2019
Sanghani, Radhika (15 January 2016).
"Only 7 per Cent of Britons Consider Themselves Feminists"
The Telegraph
Archived
from the original on 10 January 2022
. Retrieved
28 June
2019
Duggan, Lisa; Hunter, Nan D. (1995).
Sex Wars: Sexual Dissent and Political Culture
. New York: Routledge. pp.
1–14
ISBN
978-0-415-91036-1
Hansen, Karen Tranberg; Philipson, Ilene J. (1990).
Women, Class, And the Feminist Imagination: A Socialist-Feminist Reader
. Philadelphia: Temple University Press.
ISBN
978-0-87722-630-7
Gerhard, Jane F. (2001).
Desiring Revolution: Second-Wave Feminism and the Rewriting of American Sexual Thought, 1920 to 1982
. New York: Columbia University Press.
ISBN
978-0-231-11204-8
Leidholdt, Dorchen
; Raymond, Janice G. (1990).
The Sexual Liberals and the Attack On Feminism
. New York: Pergamon Press.
ISBN
978-0-08-037457-4
Vance, Carole S. (1989).
Pleasure and Danger: Exploring Female Sexuality
. Thorsons Publishers.
ISBN
978-0-04-440593-1
McBride, Andrew (2008).
"The Sex Wars, 1970s to 1980s"
OutHistory
Young, Margaret; Roberts, Steven (2023).
"Shifting old-fashioned power dynamics"?: women's perspectives on the gender transformational capacity of the dating app, Bumble"
Feminist Media Studies
23
(3):
1238–
1255.
doi
10.1080/14680777.2021.1992472
ISSN
1468-0777
. Retrieved
6 March
2026
O'Neill, Maggie (2001).
Prostitution and Feminism
. Cambridge: Polity Press. pp.
14–
16.
Rohana Ariffin; Women's Crisis Centre (Pinang, Malaysia) (1997).
Shame, Secrecy, And Silence: Study On Rape in Penang
. Women's Crisis Centre.
ISBN
978-983-99348-0-9
. Retrieved
1 October
2011
Bennet, L; Manderson, L; Astbury, J (2000).
"Mapping a global pandemic: review of current literature on rape, sexual assault and sexual harassment of women"
University of Melbourne
. Archived from
the original
on 2 November 2012.
Jewkes R, Abrahams N (2002). "The Epidemiology of Rape and Sexual Coercion in South Africa: An Overview".
Social Science & Medicine
55
(7):
1231–
44.
doi
10.1016/s0277-9536(01)00242-8
PMID
12365533
Sen P. Ending the presumption of consent: nonconsensual sex in marriage. London, Centre for Health and Gender Equity, 1999
Wahlquist, Calla (31 October 2020).
"The Sole Function of the Clitoris Is Female Orgasm. Is That Why It's Ignored by Medical Science?"
The Guardian
. Retrieved
20 December
2020
"The Myth of the Vaginal Orgasm by Anne Koedt"
. 6 January 2013. Archived from
the original
on 6 January 2013
. Retrieved
20 December
2020
Harding, Sandra (1989).
"Is There a Feminist Method"
. In Nancy Tuana (ed.).
Feminism & Science
. Indiana University Press. p.
17
ISBN
978-0-253-20525-4
Hubbard, Ruth (1990).
The Politics of Women's Biology
. Rutgers University Press. p.
16
ISBN
978-0-8135-1490-1
Lindlof, Thomas R.; Taylor, Bryan C. (2002).
Qualitative Communication Research Methods
. Thousand Oaks, Calif: SAGE Publications. p.
357
ISBN
978-0-7619-2493-7
Holloway, Marguerite (26 September 2005).
"The Beauty of Branes"
Scientific American
. Nature America. p. 2
. Retrieved
12 December
2011
Hankinson Nelson, Lynn (1990).
Who Knows: From Quine To a Feminist Empiricism
. Temple University Press. p.
30
ISBN
978-0-87722-647-5
Cortina, Lilia M.; Curtin, Nicola; Stewart, Abigail J. (2012). "Where is Social Structure in Personality Research?".
Psychology of Women Quarterly
36
(3):
259–
273.
doi
10.1177/0361684312448056
Hankinson Nelson, Lynn (1997).
Feminism, Science, And the Philosophy of Science
. Springer. p. 61.
ISBN
978-0-7923-4611-1
Anderson, Elizabeth (August 2000).
"Feminist Epistemology and Philosophy of Science"
. In Edward N. Zalta (ed.).
Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy
. Retrieved
1 April
2024
Code, Lorraine (2000).
Encyclopedia of Feminist Theories
. Taylor & Francis. p.
89
ISBN
978-0-415-13274-9
Bem, Sandra L. (1993).
The lenses of gender: transforming the debate on sexual inequality
. New Haven: Yale University Press. p. 6.
ISBN
978-0-300-05676-1
Fausto-Sterling, Anne (1992).
Myths of Gender: Biological Theories About Women and Men
. New York: BasicBooks.
ISBN
978-0-465-04792-5
Fine, Cordelia
(2010).
Delusions of Gender: How Our Minds, Society, And Neurosexism Create Difference
. W. W. Norton & Company.
page needed
Worell, Judith (September 2000).
"Feminism in Psychology: Revolution or Evolution?"
(PDF)
The Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science
571
183–
96.
doi
10.1177/0002716200571001013
JSTOR
1049142
Archived
(PDF)
from the original on 14 July 2014
. Retrieved
12 July
2014
"Psychology's Feminist Voices"
Psychology's Feminist Voices
. Retrieved
12 July
2014
Prochner, Isabel (March 2018).
Feminist Contributions to Industrial Design and Design for Sustainability Theories and Practices
(PDF)
(doctoral thesis). Université de Montréal.
Buckley, Cheryl (1986). "Made in Patriarchy: Toward a Feminist Analysis of Women and Design".
Design Issues
(2):
3–
14.
doi
10.2307/1511480
JSTOR
1511480
Rothschild, Judith (1999).
Design and Feminism: Re-Visioning Spaces, Places, and Everyday Things
Prochner, Isabel; Marchand, Anne (2018). "Learning from Feminist Critiques of and Recommendations for Industrial Design".
DRS2018: Design as a catalyst for change
doi
10.21606/drs.2018.355
Echols (1989)
, pp. 269–278.
Hogan, Kristen (2016).
The Feminist Bookstore Movement: Lesbian Antiracism and Feminist Accountability
. Durham, N.C.: Duke University Press.
Blake Gopnik (22 April 2007).
"What Is Feminist Art?"
The Washington Post
. Retrieved
3 December
2011
Hoban, Phoebe (December 2009).
"The Feminist Evolution"
ARTnews
. Archived from
the original
on 18 January 2012
. Retrieved
4 December
2011
Ferrando, Francesca (2016).
"A feminist genealogy of posthuman aesthetics in the visual arts"
Palgrave Communications
(16011) 16011.
doi
10.1057/palcomms.2016.11
Blain, Virginia; Clements, Patricia; Grundy, Isobel (1990).
The Feminist Companion to Literature in English: Women Writers from the Middle Ages to the Present
. New Haven: Yale University Press. pp.
vii–x
ISBN
978-0-300-04854-4
Gulbrandsen, Cari L.; Walsh, Christine A. (1 August 2012).
"It Starts With Me: Women Mediate Power Within Feminist Activism"
Affilia
27
(3):
275–
288.
doi
10.1177/0886109912452640
ISSN
0886-1099
Gilbert, Sandra M.
(4 May 1986).
"Paperbacks: From Our Mothers' Libraries: Women Who Created the Novel"
The New York Times
Buck, Claire, ed. (1992).
The Bloomsbury Guide to Women's Literature
. Prentice Hall. p. vix.
Salzman, Paul (2000). "Introduction".
Early Modern Women's Writing
. Oxford University Press. pp.
ix–
x.
Term coined by Ellen Moers in
Literary Women: The Great Writers
(New York: Doubleday, 1976). See also Juliann E. Fleenor, ed.,
The Female Gothic
(Montreal: Eden Press, 1983) and Gary Kelly, ed.,
Varieties of Female Gothic
6 Vols. (London: Pickering & Chatto, 2002).
Gubar, Susan (1 March 1980).
"C.L. Moore and the Conventions of Women's Science Fiction"
Science Fiction Studies
(Part 1 (20)):
16–
27.
doi
10.1525/sfs.7.1.0016
ISSN
0091-7729
Helford, Elyce Rae (2005).
"Feminist Science Fiction"
. In Westfahl, Gary (ed.).
The Greenwood Encyclopedia of Science Fiction and Fantasy
. Greenwood Press. pp.
289–291
ISBN
978-0-300-04854-4
Lips, Hilary M. (1990). "Using Science Fiction to Teach the Psychology of Sex and Gender".
Teaching of Psychology
17
(3):
197–
198.
doi
10.1207/s15328023top1703_17
"Hrotsvitha of Gandersheim (C. 935–1001) | Encyclopedia.com"
www.encyclopedia.com
. Retrieved
31 July
2024
Shah, Mahvish (2018).
"I Know Why The Caged Bird Sings: Angelou's Quest to Truth and Power"
Feminism in India
Poetry Foundation (29 November 2018).
"A Change of World"
Poetry Foundation
Case, Sue-Ellen (December 1983). "Re-Viewing Hrotsvit".
Theatre Journal
35
(4):
533–
542.
doi
10.2307/3207334
JSTOR
3207334
Sack, Harald (6 February 2019).
"Hrotsvitha of Gandersheim – The Most Remarkable Women of Her Time"
SciHi Blog
. Archived from
the original
on 17 April 2021
. Retrieved
6 December
2019
Frankforter, A. Daniel (1979). "Hroswitha of Gandersheim and the Destiny of Women".
The Historian
41
(2):
295–
314.
doi
10.1111/j.1540-6563.1979.tb00548.x
Emily McFarlan Miller (20 March 2019).
"Hrotsvitha Vs. Gobnait"
Lent Madness
. Retrieved
23 November
2019
Sack, Harald (6 February 2019).
"Hrotsvitha of Gandersheim – The Most Remarkable Women of Her Time"
SciHi Blog
. Archived from
the original
on 17 April 2021
. Retrieved
23 November
2019
Lont, Cynthia (1992).
"Women's Music: No Longer a Small Private Party"
. In Garofalo, Reebee (ed.).
Rockin' the Boat: Mass Music & Mass Movements
. Cambridge, Mass.: South End Press. p.
242
ISBN
978-0-89608-427-8
Peraino, Judith A. (2001).
"Girls with Guitars and Other Strange Stories"
Journal of the American Musicological Society
54
(3):
692–
709.
doi
10.1525/jams.2001.54.3.692
. Archived from
the original
on 8 November 2012.
Mosbacher, Dee
(2002).
Radical Harmonies
. San Francisco: Woman Vision.
OCLC
53071762
Beard, David; Gloag, Kenneth (2005).
Musicology: The Key Concepts
. Routledge key guides. London: Routledge.
ISBN
978-0-415-31692-7
Duchen, Jessica
(28 February 2015).
"Why the Male Domination of Classical Music Might Be Coming to an End"
The Guardian
Ncube, Rosina (September 2013).
"Sounding Off: Why So Few Women in Audio?"
Sound on Sound
"Women's Activism NYC"
www.womensactivism.nyc
. Retrieved
15 December
2023
"Remembering Films by Faten Hamama Championing Women's Rights | Egyptian Streets"
. 27 May 2019
. Retrieved
15 December
2023
Hayward, Susan (2006).
Cinema Studies – The Key Concepts
(3rd ed.).
Routledge
. pp.
134–
5.
Erens, Patricia Brett (1991).
Issues in Feminist Film Criticism
Wiley & Sons
. p. 270.
ISBN
978-0-253-20610-7
Kuhn, A.; Radstone, S., eds. (1990).
Women's Companion to International Film
. Virago. p.
153
ISBN
978-1-85381-081-7
Ettinger, Bracha; Szpeker-Benat, Ghislaine; Pollock, Griselda (1999).
Regard et espace-de-bord matrixiels: essais psychanalytiques sur le féminin et le travail de l'art
. Collection essais. Bruxelles: Lettre volée.
ISBN
978-2-87317-102-5
Ettinger, Bracha (2020). Pollock, Griselda (ed.).
Matrixial Subjectivity, Aesthetics, Ethics: Volume 1 1990-2000
. Studies in the Psychosocial. London: Palgrave Macmillan UK.
ISBN
978-1-137-34515-8
Ettinger, Bracha; Christov-Bakargiev, Carolyn; Pollock, Griselda; Kinsella, Tina; Benjamin, Andrew E.; Wolkstein, Oded; Bourriaud, Nicolas; Ḳara-Iṿanov Ḳaniʾel, Rut; Buci-Glucksmann, Christine (2015).
Bracha L. Ettinger: and my heart wound-space
. Leeds: Wild Pansy Press.
ISBN
978-1-900687-55-3
Gutierrez-Albilla, Julian. Aesthetics, Ethics and Trauma in the Cinema of Pedro Almodovar. Edinburch University Press, 2017.
Gardiner, Kyoko. "Ettingerian reading of feminine-matrixial encounters in Duras/Rennais' Hiroshima Mon Amour". In: Ayelet Zohar, ed. PostGender. Newcastle upon Tyne: Cambridge Scholars Publishing, 2009.
de Zegher, Catherine M., ed. Inside the Visible. Boston: The Institute of Contemporary Art/Cambridge and London: MIT Press, 1996
Pollock, Griselda
. Encounters in the Virtual Feminist Museum. Taylor and Francis, 2010.
Carol Armstrong
and
Catherine de Zegher
. Women Artists at the Millennium. October Books/MIT Press, 2006 2006.
Vandenbroeck, Paul. The Glimpse of the Concealed. Royal Museum of Fine Art, Antwerp, 2017.
Butler, Judith. "Bracha's Eurydice". In: Drawing Papers, no 24: 31–35, 2001.
Giannetti, Louis D. (1996).
Understanding movies
(7th ed.). Englewood Cliffs, N.J.: Prentice Hall. p. 416.
ISBN
978-0-13-190836-9
Derek Thompson (11 January 2018).
"The Brutal Math of Gender Inequality in Hollywood"
The Atlantic
"Assessing the Gender Gap in the Film Industry"
. NamSor Blog. 16 April 2014.
Badia, Gilbert (1994).
Zetkin. Femminista Senza Frontiere
. University of Michigan. p. 320.
ISBN
978-88-85378-53-7
Duby, Georges; Perrot, Michelle; Schmitt Pantel, Pauline (1994).
A History of Women in the West
. Cambridge, Mass.: Belknap Press of Harvard University Press. p.
600
ISBN
978-0-674-40369-7
The Radical Women Manifesto: Socialist Feminist Theory, Program and Organizational Structure
. Seattle, WA: Red Letter Press. 2001.
ISBN
978-0-932323-11-8
Ibárruri, Dolores (1938).
Speeches & Articles, 1936–1938
. University of Michigan. p. 263.
John McGuffin (1973).
"Internment – Women Internees 1916–1973"
. Retrieved
22 March
2009
"Countess Constance De Markievicz"
ElectionsIreland.org
. Archived from
the original
on 28 September 2019
. Retrieved
22 March
2009
Bunbury, Turtle.
"Dorothea Findlater – One Hundred Years On"
. Retrieved
5 January
2016
Perhaps the most awkward arrest Wheeler made was Countess Markievicz, his wife's first cousin.
Hägg, Göran (2008).
Mussolini: En Studie I Makt
A study in power
] (in Swedish). Stockholm: Norstedt.
ISBN
978-91-1-301949-9
Passmore, Kevin
(2003).
Women, Gender and Fascism in Europe, 1919–45
. Piscataway, N.J.: Rutgers Univ. Press.
ISBN
978-0-8135-3308-7
Blamires, Cyprian (2006).
World Fascism: A Historical Encyclopedia
. Vol. 1. ABC-CLIO. pp.
232–
33.
ISBN
978-1-57607-940-9
Levy, Peter (1998).
The Civil Rights Movement
. Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press.
ISBN
978-0-313-29854-7
Code, Lorraine (2000).
"Civil rights"
Encyclopedia of Feminist Theories
. Taylor & Francis.
ISBN
978-0-415-13274-9
hooks, bell (3 October 2014).
Feminist Theory
doi
10.4324/9781315743172
ISBN
978-1-315-74317-2
Manditch-Prottas, Zachary (2019). "Meeting at the Watchtower: Eldridge Cleaver, James Baldwin's No Name in the Street, and Racializing Homophobic Vernacular".
African American Review
52
(2):
179–
195.
doi
10.1353/afa.2019.0027
Roth, Benita (2004).
Separate Roads to Feminism: Black, Chicana, And White Feminist Movements in America's Second Wave
. Cambridge University Press.
ISBN
978-0-521-52972-3
Winddance Twine, France; Blee, Kathleen M. (2001).
Feminism and Antiracism: International Struggles for Justice
. NYU Press.
ISBN
978-0-8147-9855-3
page needed
Ritchie, Joy; Ronald, Kate, eds. (12 July 2001). "The Combahee River Collective Statement (1977)".
Available Means: An Anthology Of Women'S Rhetoric(s)
. University of Pittsburgh Press. pp.
292–
300.
doi
10.2307/j.ctt5hjqnj.50
ISBN
978-0-8229-7975-3
JSTOR
j.ctt5hjqnj
Peterson, V. Spike (2014).
"International/Global Political Economy"
. In Shepherd, Laura J. (ed.).
Gender Matters in Global Politics
(2 ed.). Routledge.
ISBN
978-1-134-75259-1
Elias, Juanita; Ferguson, Lucy (2014).
"Production, Employment, and Consumption"
. In Shepherd, Laura J. (ed.).
Gender Matters in Global Politics
. Routledge.
ISBN
978-1-134-75259-1
Lockwood, Bert B. (2006).
Women's Rights: A Human Rights Quarterly Reader
. The Johns Hopkins University Press.
ISBN
978-0-8018-8374-3
Freeman, Jo
"From Suffrage to Women's Liberation: Feminism in Twentieth Century America"
Rush, Florence
(1988).
The Best Kept Secret: Sexual Abuse of Children
. Englewood Cliffs, N.J.: Prentice-Hall.
ISBN
978-0-07-054223-5
"Statement of Purpose"
National Organization for Women
. 29 October 1966.
Archived
from the original on 2 December 2023.
Hochschild, Arlie Russell; Machung, Anne (2003).
The Second Shift
. New York: Penguin Books.
ISBN
978-0-14-200292-6
Hochschild, Arlie Russell (2001).
The Time Bind: When Work Becomes Home and Home Becomes Work
. New York: Henry Holt & Co.
ISBN
978-0-8050-6643-2
Young, Cathy
(12 June 2000).
"The Mama Lion at the Gate"
Salon.com
. Retrieved
17 December
2015
Brown, Judith K. (October 1970). "A Note on the Division of Labor by Sex".
American Anthropologist
72
(5):
1073–
78.
doi
10.1525/aa.1970.72.5.02a00070
"Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women New York, 18 December 1979"
. Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights
. Retrieved
31 March
2013
Garner, Bryan
, ed. (2014).
Black's Law Dictionary
(10th ed.). St. Paul, Minn.: Thomson Reuters. p. 985.
ISBN
978-0-314-61300-4
Feminist jurisprudence examines ... the history of legal and social biases against women, the elimination of those biases in modern law, and the enhancement of women's legal rights and recognition [status] in society.
Minda, Gary (1995).
Postmodern Legal Movements: Law and Jurisprudence at Century's End
NYU Press
. pp.
129–
30.
ISBN
978-0-8147-5510-5
Feminist legal scholars, despite their differences, appear united in claiming that 'masculine' jurisprudence ... fails to acknowledge, let alone respond to, the interests, values, fears, and harms experienced by women.
Miller, Casey
Swift, Kate
(1988).
The Handbook of Nonsexist Writing
. New York: Harper & Row. pp.
45
, 64, 66.
ISBN
978-0-06-181602-4
Aarts, Bas; McMahon, April, eds. (2006).
The Handbook of English Linguistics
. Malden, Mass.: Blackwell.
ISBN
978-1-4051-1382-3
"Word of the Year 2017"
Merriam-Webster
Bundesen, Lynne (30 March 2007).
The Feminine Spirit: Recapturing the Heart of Scripture
. Jossey-Bass.
ISBN
978-0-7879-8495-3
Haddad, Mimi (2006).
"Egalitarian Pioneers: Betty Friedan or Catherine Booth?"
(PDF)
Priscilla Papers
20
(4). Archived from
the original
(PDF)
on 13 July 2015.
Anderson, Pamela Sue; Clack, Beverley (2004).
Feminist Philosophy of Religion: Critical Readings
. London: Routledge.
ISBN
978-0-415-25749-7
Badran, Margot (17–23 January 2002).
"Islamic Feminism: What's in a Name?"
. Retrieved
17 December
2015
Catalonian Islamic Board (24–27 October 2008).
"II International Congress on Islamic Feminism"
. feminismeislamic.org. Archived from
the original
on 14 January 2007
. Retrieved
9 July
2008
Gross, Rita M. (1992).
Buddhism After Patriarchy: A Feminist History, Analysis, And Reconstruction of Buddhism
. Albany, N.Y.:
State University of New York Press
. p.
127
ISBN
978-0-7914-1403-3
. Retrieved
7 October
2012
Plaskow, Judith (2003). "Jewish Feminist Thought". In Frank, Daniel H. (ed.).
History of Jewish Philosophy
. Leaman, Oliver. London: Routledge.
ISBN
978-0-415-32469-4
Marjorie Ingall (18 November 2005).
"Why Are There so Many Jewish Feminists?"
The Forward
. Retrieved
31 May
2015
Gaylor, Annie Laurie (2004).
Woe to the women-- the Bible tells me so: the Bible, female sexuality & the law
(Rev. ed.). Madison, Wis.: Freedom From Religion Foundation.
ISBN
978-1-877733-12-3
OCLC
57357639
Hirsi Ali, Ayaan; Hirsi Ali, Ayaan (2007).
The caged virgin: a Muslim woman's cry for reason
. London: Pocket.
ISBN
978-1-4165-2623-0
Miles, Rosalind (2001).
Who cooked the Last Supper? the women's history of the world
(1st Three Rivers Press ed.). New York: Three Rivers Press.
ISBN
978-0-609-80695-1
Encyclopedia of Sex and Gender
. Detroit, Mich.: Macmillan Reference. 2007.
Pateman, Carole (25 March 2014).
The Sexual Contract
. John Wiley & Sons. p. 207.
ISBN
978-0-7456-8035-4
Tickner, Ann J. (2001).
"Patriarchy"
Routledge Encyclopedia of International Political Economy: Entries PZ
. Taylor & Francis. pp.
1197–
98.
ISBN
978-0-415-24352-0
Hoagland, Sarah Lucia (1988).
Lesbian Ethics: Toward New Value
. Institute of Lesbian Studies.
ISBN
978-0-934903-03-5
Friedan, Betty (1998).
The second stage: with a new introduction
(1st Harvard University Press pbk. ed.). Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press.
ISBN
978-0-674-79655-3
Bullough, Vern L., ed. (1994).
Human sexuality: an encyclopedia
. Garland reference library of social science. New York: Garland.
ISBN
978-0-8240-7972-7
Echols 1989
, p. 78 & n. 124 ("124. Interview with Cindy Cisler".) and see p. 119
Tong, Rosemarie Putnam (1998).
Feminist Thought: A More Comprehensive Introduction
(2nd ed.). Boulder, Colo.: Westview Press. p. 70.
ISBN
978-0-8133-3295-6
Gardiner, Judith Kegan (2002).
Masculinity Studies and Feminist Theory
. Columbia University Press. pp. 96, 153.
ISBN
978-0-231-12278-8
Uviller, Rena K. (1978). "Fathers' Rights and Feminism: The Maternal Presumption Revisited".
Harvard Women's Law Journal
: 107.
Shanley, Mary (January 1995). "Unwed Fathers' Rights, Adoption, And Sex Equality: Gender-Neutrality And the Perpetuation of Patriarchy".
Columbia Law Review
95
(1):
60–
103.
doi
10.2307/1123127
JSTOR
1123127
Levit, Nancy (1996). "Feminism for Men: Legal Ideology and the Construction of Maleness".
UCLA Law Review
43
(4).
SSRN
1297365
Digby, Tom, ed. (1998).
Men doing feminism
. Thinking gender. New York: Routledge.
ISBN
978-0-415-91625-7
Phillips, Layli (2006). Phillips, Layli (ed.).
The Womanist reader
. New York: CRC Press.
ISBN
978-0-415-95411-2
Jardine, Alice A.; Smith, Paul (1989).
Men in feminism
. New York: Routledge.
ISBN
978-0-415-90251-9
Zucker, Alyssa N. (2004). "Disavowing Social Identities: What it Means when Women Say, 'I'm not a Feminist, but …'
".
Psychology of Women Quarterly
28
(4):
423–
435.
doi
10.1111/j.1471-6402.2004.00159.x
Burn, Shawn Meghan; Aboud, Roger; Moyles, Carey (2000). "The Relationship Between Gender Social Identity and Support for Feminism".
Sex Roles
42
11–
12):
1081–
1089.
doi
10.1023/A:1007044802798
Renzetti, Claire M. (1987). "New wave or second stage? Attitudes of college women toward feminism".
Sex Roles
16
5–
6):
265–
277.
doi
10.1007/BF00289954
Lind, Rebecca Ann; Salo, Colleen (2002). "The Framing of Feminists and Feminism in News and Public Affairs Programs in U.S. Electronic Media".
Journal of Communication
52
211–
28.
doi
10.1111/j.1460-2466.2002.tb02540.x
Roy, Robin E.; Weibust, Kristin S.; Miller, Carol T. (2007). "Effects of Stereotypes About Feminists on Feminist Self-Identification".
Psychology of Women Quarterly
31
(2):
146–
156.
doi
10.1111/j.1471-6402.2007.00348.x
Moradi, Bonnie; Martin, Annelise; Brewster, Melanie E. (2012). "Disarming the Threat to Feminist Identification".
Psychology of Women Quarterly
36
(2):
197–
209.
doi
10.1177/0361684312440959
Lingard, Bob; Douglas, Peter (1999).
Men Engaging Feminisms: Pro-Feminism, Backlashes and Schooling
. Buckingham, England: Open University Press. p. 192.
ISBN
978-0-335-19818-4
Kimmel, Michael S.
; Mosmiller, Thomas E. (1992).
Against the Tide: Pro-Feminist Men in the United States, 1776–1990: A Documentary History
. Boston: Beacon Press.
ISBN
978-0-8070-6767-3
page needed
Sommers, Christina Hoff
(1995).
Who Stole Feminism? How Women Have Betrayed Women
. New York: Simon & Schuster. p.
320
ISBN
978-0-684-80156-8
Simpson, John A.
Weiner, Edmund S.C.
(1989). "Anti-feminist". In
Simpson, John A.
Weiner, Edmund S. C.
(eds.).
The Oxford English Dictionary
(2nd ed.). Oxford: Clarendon Press Oxford University Press.
ISBN
978-0-19-861186-8
Kimmel, Michael
(2004).
"Antifeminism"
. In
Kimmel, Michael
Aronson, Amy
(eds.).
Men and Masculinities a Social, Cultural, and Historical Encyclopedia
. Santa Barbara, Calif.: ABC-CLIO. pp.
35–
37.
ISBN
978-1-57607-774-0
Lukas, Carrie
(2006).
"Marriage: happier ever after"
. In
Lukas, Carrie
(ed.).
The politically incorrect guide to women, sex, and feminism
. Washington, D.C.: Regnery Publishing. p.
75
ISBN
978-1-59698-003-7
Feminists' assault on marriage also has played a role in devaluing marriage. Radical feminists view marriage as a cruel trap for women, perpetuating patriarchy, and keeping women subservient to men. They lament the roles that women and men tend to assume in traditional marriages, believing that women get the worse deal from the marriage contract.
Kassian, Mary (2005). "Introduction: the tsunami of feminism". In Kassian, Mary (ed.).
The feminist
mystique
mistake: the radical impact of feminism on church and culture
(2nd ed.). Wheaton, Ill.:
Crossway Books
. p. 10.
ISBN
978-1-58134-570-4
The feminist assault on traditional gender roles and families began in earnest in the 1960s and increasingly turned radical in the 1970s.
Schlafly, Phyllis
(1977). "Understanding the difference". In
Schlafly, Phyllis
(ed.).
The Power of the Positive Woman
. New Rochelle, N.Y.: Arlington House. p.
12
ISBN
978-0-87000-373-8
The second dogma of the women's liberationists is that, of all the injustices perpetuated upon women through the centuries, the most oppressive is the cruel fact that women have babies and men do not. Within the confines of the women's liberationist ideology, therefore, the abolition of this overriding inequality of women becomes the primary goal. This goal must be achieved at any at all costs – to the woman herself, to the baby, to the family, and to society. Women must be made equal to men in their ability
not
to become pregnant and
not
to be expected to care for babies they may bring into the world.
Gottfried, Paul
(21 April 2001).
"The Trouble with Feminism"
LewRockwell.com
Lew Rockwell
. Retrieved
30 September
2006
al-Qaradawi, Yusuf
(2008). "Women and family in Islamist discourses: 'When Islam prohibits something, it closes all the avenues of approach to it'
". In
Calvert, John
(ed.).
Islamism: a documentary and reference guide
. Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press. p. 62.
ISBN
978-0-313-33856-4
Islamists are aggrieved at the support of ostensibly Muslim governments for the 'alleged' legal emancipation of women, including granting women the right to vote and hold public office, in addition to limited rights to initiate divorce. Although many Muslim women take pride in the fact that they now perform jobs and enter professions once reserved for men, for most Islamists female employment and legal emancipation are dangerous trends that lead to the dissolution of traditional gender roles associated with the extended family.
Patai, Daphne
(2003). "Policing the academy:
Anti-feminist intellectual harassment
". In
Patai, Daphne
; Koertge, Noretta (eds.).
Professing feminism: education and indoctrination in women's studies
. Lanham, Md.: Lexington Books. pp.
278–
79.
ISBN
978-0-7391-0455-2
the book [
Antifeminism in the Academy
by Clark, Vévé et al.] attempts to extend an already dubious concept – hostile environment harassment – to encompass a whole new range of thought and behavior. Delineating the many types of alleged anti-feminist practices perpetrated in colleges, universities, and publishing houses around the country, contributors to this book propose in all seriousness that measures be taken against a new and pervasive kind of offense: 'antifeminst intellectual harassment.'
Danowitz Sagaria, Mary Ann (January 1999). "Review: Reviewed Work:
Antifeminism in the Academy
by Vévé Clark, Shirley Nelson Garner, Margaret Higonnet, Ketu H. Katrak".
The Journal of Higher Education
70
(1):
110–
12.
doi
10.2307/2649121
JSTOR
2649121
Doran, Tatiana; West, Robin (June 1998).
"Feminism or Humanism?"
Yale Law Journal
107
(8): 2661.
doi
10.2307/797353
JSTOR
797353
O'Sullivan, Cordelia Tucker (7 March 2015).
"Why Humanism and Feminism Go Hand in Hand"
HumanistLife
. Retrieved
9 January
2019
Ross, Sarah Gwyneth (2009).
The Birth of Feminism: Woman As Intellect in Renaissance Italy and England
. Harvard University Press.
ISBN
978-0-674-03454-9
OCLC
517501929
External links
Feminism
at Wikipedia's
sister projects
Definitions
from Wiktionary
Media
from Commons
Quotations
from Wikiquote
Resources
from Wikiversity
Articles
"Feminism"
Collier's New Encyclopedia
. 1921.
"Feminism"
Encyclopedia Americana
. 1920.
Feminist Philosophy
, at the
Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy
Multimedia and documents
Feminism
on
In Our Time
at the
BBC
Documents from the Women's Liberation Movement
, Special Collections Library, Duke University
History of feminism
at
Heritage Calling
Historic England
Books
Finding Feminism: Millennial Activists and the Unfinished Gender Revolution
Feminism
History
General
Timeline
First-wave
Second-wave
timeline
Third-wave
Fourth-wave
Social
Bicycling and feminism
Feminist history
Women's history
Timeline of women's legal rights (other than voting)
Women's suffrage
Timeline
Australia
Canada
Japan
Kuwait
Majority-Muslim countries
New Zealand
Switzerland
United Kingdom
Wales
United States
Timeline
African-American
States of
Utah
Virginia
Wyoming
Movements and ideologies
General
Abortion-rights
Analytical
Anarchist
Anti-abortion
Anti-fascist
Atheist
Bodily integrity
Carceral
Conservative
Cultural
Cyber
HCI
Difference
Eco
Vegetarian
Equality
Eugenic
Fat
Gender-critical or trans-exclusionary
By country
Global
Hip hop
Activism
Individualist
Intersectional
Labor
Lesbian
Liberal
Equity
Lipstick
Materialist
Maternal
Neo-
New
Post-
Postcolonial
Postmodern
Post-structural
Radical
Reactionary
Reproductive rights
Separatism
Sex workers' rights
Sex-positive
Sexual and reproductive health and rights
Social
Socialist
Marxist
Standpoint
State
Trans
Transnational
Victim
Womanism
Africana
Women's liberation
Religious
Atheist
Buddhist
Christian
Mormon
New
Womanist
Asian
Neopagan
Dianic Wicca
Reclaiming
Ecofeminist
Hindu
Islamic
Jewish
Orthodox
Sikh
Ethnic and racial
Black
Chicana
Indigenous
Kurdish (Jineology)
Native American
Sámi
Jewish
Mizrahi
Romani
White
Concepts
Antinaturalism
Choice feminism
Cognitive labor
Conscription
Complementarianism
Literature
Children's literature
Diversity (politics)
Diversity, equity, and inclusion
Effects on society
Equality
Female education
Female genital mutilation
Femicide
Transfemicide
Femonationalism
Femosphere
Feminism in culture
Feminist movement
African-American women's suffrage movement
Art movement
In hip hop
Feminist stripper
Formal equality
Gender equality
Gender quota
Gender role
Girl power
Honor killing
Ideal womanhood
Invisible labor
Internalized sexism
International
Girl's Day
and
Women's Day
Language reform
Feminist capitalism
Gender-blind
Likeability trap
Male privilege
Matriarchal religion
Media
Men in feminism
Misogyny
Trans
Oedipus complex
Opposition to feminism
Pro-feminism
Protofeminism
Purplewashing
Racism
Reproductive justice
Sentencing disparity
Sex workers' rights
Sexual harassment
Sexual objectification
Substantive equality
Toxic masculinity
Transmisogyny
Triple oppression
Violence against women
War on women
Women's empowerment
Women-only space
Women's health
Women's rights
Women in the workforce
Theory
Complementarianism
Gender studies
Gender mainstreaming
Gynocentrism
Matriarchy
Women's studies
Men's studies
Kyriarchy
Patriarchy
Écriture féminine
Economics
Post-structuralist discourse analysis
Method
Oedipus complex
Political theory
Theology
Thealogy
Womanist
Sexology
Sociology
Rhetoric
Legal theory
Art
Art criticism
Literary criticism
Film theory
Biology
Political ecology
Architecture
Anthropology
Archaeology
Criminology
Pathways perspective
Geography
Pedagogy
Philosophy
Aesthetics
Empiricism
Epistemology
Ethics
Justice ethics
Existentialism
Metaphysics
Science
Pornography
Psychology
Therapy
Seriality
International relations
Existentialism
Revisionist mythology
Technoscience
Science fiction
Composition studies
By country
Africa
Democratic Republic of the Congo
Egypt
Ethiopia
Ghana
Mali
Nigeria
Senegal
South Africa
Albania
Australia
Balkans
Bangladesh
Canada
China
Denmark
Finland
France
Germany
Greece
Haiti
Hong Kong
India
Indonesia
Iran
Iraq
Ireland
Israel
Italy
Japan
Latin America
Argentina
Brazil
Chile
Honduras
Mexico
Paraguay
Lebanon
Malaysia
Nepal
Netherlands
New Zealand
Northern Cyprus
Norway
Pakistan
Philippines
Poland
Portugal
Russia
Saudi Arabia
South Korea
Sweden
Syria
Taiwan
Thailand
Trinidad and Tobago
Turkey
Vietnam
Ukraine
United Kingdom
United States
History of women
Lists
People
Art critics
Ecofeminist authors
Economists
Jewish
Muslim
Philosophers
Poets
Rhetoricians
Suffragists and suffragettes
Women's rights activists
Other
Conservative feminisms
Literature
American
Comic books
Parties
Women's studies journals
SCUM Manifesto
(1967)
Women in peacekeeping
Feminism portal
Category
Index
Discrimination
Forms
Institutional
Reverse
Structural
Statistical
Systemic
Taste-based
Attributes
Physical
Age
Anti-left handedness
Color / Chroma
Anti-albinism
Skin color
Disability
Genetic disorder
Looks
Hair texture
Mental disorder
Anti-autism
Race / Ethnicity
Reverse
Scientific racism
Sex
Anti-intersex
Reverse
Sexual orientation
Species
Size
Height
Social
Caste
Class
Economic
Language
Dialect
Nationality or citizenship
Rank
Viewpoint
Social
Arophobia
Acephobia
Adultism
Against men
Anti-altruistic
Anti-drug addicts
Anti-homelessness
Anti-intellectualism
Anti-Masonry
Anti-Otaku
Aporophobia
Audism
Biphobia
Elitism
Endophobia
Ephebiphobia
Health
mental
in poverty
Fatphobia
Gayphobia
Gerontophobia
Heterosexism
Discrimination against lesbians
HIV/AIDS stigma
Hypergamy
Homophobia
In-group
Leprosy stigma
Misandry
Misogyny
Misogynoir
Nepotism
Outgroup
Perpetual foreigner
Pregnancy
Regional
Sectarianism
Supremacism
Aryanism
Black
Hutu
Chauvinism
Han
Hoklo Taiwanese
Female
Human
Nordicism
Male
Ultranationalism
White
Transphobia
Non-binary
Transmisogyny
Trans men
Vegaphobia
Xenophilia
Xenophobia
Religious
Religious exemption
Persecution of non-believers
Atheism
In Islam
Apostasy
Religious police
Jizya
Religious persecution
In China
Exclusivism
Baháʼí Faith
Buddhism
Christianity
Persecution
Catholicism
Eastern Orthodoxy
Coptic Christianity
Jehovah's Witnesses
LDS or Mormon
Protestantism
Tewahedo Orthodoxy
post–Cold War era
Falun Gong
Hinduism
Persecution
Untouchability
Islam
Persecution
Ahmadiyya
Shi'ism
Sufism
Sunnism
minority Muslim
Judaism
Persecution
Neopaganism
Rastafari
Serers
Sikhism
Yazidism
Zoroastrianism
Race / Ethnicity
Afghan
Pashtun
Hazara
African
Fulani
Igbo
Serers
Yoruba
Albanian
Arab
Armenian
Asian
France
South Africa
United States
Assyrian
Austrian
Azerbaijani
Black people
African American
China
South Africa
Bengali
Brazilian
Catalan
Chechen
Chinese
Han people
Colombian
Croat
Dutch
Eritrean
Estonian
Ethiopian
Amhara
Oromo
Filipino
French
Finnish
Georgian
German
Greek
Haitian
Hispanic
Hungarian
Indian
Indonesian
Indigenous people
Australia
Canada
United States
Iranian
Irish
Italian
Japanese
Jewish
Eliminationist
New
Religious
Anti-Yiddish
Zionist
Kazakh
Khmer
Korean
Kurdish
Lithuanian
Malay
Māori
Mexican
Middle Eastern
Mongolian
Montenegrin
Moroccan
Nigerian
Pakistani
Palestinian
Peruvian
Polish
Portuguese
Quebec
Romani
Romanian
Russian
Scottish
Serb
Slavic
Somali
Spanish
Swedish
Taiwanese
Tatar
Thai
Tibetan
Turkish
Ukrainian
Uyghur
Venezuelan
Vietnamese
Welsh
White people
Nationality
American
Australian
Brazilian
British
Canadian
Chilean
Inter-Korean
North
South
Manifestations
Algorithmic bias
Anti-LGBTQ rhetoric
SPLC-designated list of anti-LGBTQ hate groups
Blood libel
Bullying
Cancel culture
Capital punishment for homosexuality
Carnism
Compulsory sterilization
Corrective rape
Counter-jihad
Cultural genocide
Defamation
Democide
Dog whistle
Domicide
Economic
Education
Academic
In curricula
Sexism
Eliminationism
Eliminationist antisemitism
Employment
Enemy of the people
Environmental racism
Ethnic cleansing
Ethnic conflict
Ethnic hatred
Ethnic joke
Ethnocide
Excellence
Gender-based dress codes
Cosmetics policy
High heel policy
Forced conversion
Freak show
Gay bashing
Gendercide
Transgender genocide
Transfemicide
Genital modification and mutilation
Circumcision
Female genital mutilation
Intersex medical interventions
Genocide
examples
Glass ceiling
Hate crime
Disability hate crime
Violence against LGBTQ people
Violence against transgender people
Hate group
Hate speech
Institutional discrimination
Institutional racism
Homeless dumping
Housing
Hypergamy
Age disparity
Indian rolling
International inequality
Kill Haole Day
Lavender Scare
LGBTQ
grooming conspiracy theory
Linguicide
Lynching
Media bias
Minority stress
Moral exclusion
Mortgage
Native American mascots
Occupational
Apartheid
Inequality
Injustice
Segregation
Opposition to immigration
Paper genocide
Persecution
Pogrom
Political
Political repression
Ideological repression
Purge
Racialization
Religious persecution
Religious terrorism
Religious violence
Religious war
Scapegoating
Selective enforcement
Selective prosecution
Sentencing disparity
Sexual harassment
Sex-selective abortion
Slut-shaming
Structural abuse
Structural discrimination
Structural evil
Structural inequality
Structural violence
Tourismphobia
Untermensch
Trans bashing
Victimisation
Violence against women
White flight
White genocide conspiracy theory
Wife selling
Witch hunt
Discriminatory
policies
Algorithmic wage discrimination
Age of candidacy
Apartheid
in South Africa
in Israel
Blood purity
Blood quantum
Breadwinner model
Conscription and sexism
Disabilities
Catholic
Disparate impact
Fagging
Gender pay gap
Gender roles
Protecting Women's Private Spaces Act
Gerontocracy
Gerrymandering
Ghetto benches
Internment
Jewish quota
Jewish disabilities
Opposition to LGBTQ rights
MSM blood donation restrictions
No kid zone
Numerus clausus
(as religious or racial quota)
One-drop rule
Racial quota
Racial steering
Redlining
Same-sex marriage (laws and issues prohibiting)
Segregation
age
racial
Jim Crow laws
Nuremberg Laws
Segregation academy
religious
sexual
in Islam
Social exclusion
Sodomy law
State atheism
State religion
Transphobia
Persecution of transgender people under the second Trump administration
V-coding
Ugly law
Voter suppression
White Australia policy
Countermeasures
Affirmative action
Anti-discrimination law
Anti-racism
Audit study
Autistic rights movement
Gender-blind
Blind audition
Constitutional colorblindness
Cross-sex friendship
Cultural assimilation
Cultural pluralism
Diversity, equity, and inclusion
Diversity training
Empowerment
Fat acceptance movement
Feminism
Fighting Discrimination
Golden Rule
Hate speech laws by country
Human rights
Intersex human rights
Korenizatsiia
LGBTQ rights
Mad pride
Music in the movement against apartheid
Racial integration
Reappropriation
Rock Against Sexism
Self-determination
Social integration
Stop Murder Music
Toleration
Transgender rights movement
Universal suffrage
Women's rights
Related topics
Allophilia
Amatonormativity
Bias
Capital punishment for homosexuality
Cisnormativity
Civil liberties
Criminalization of homosexuality
Dehumanization
Disease of despair
Ethnic penalty
Figleaf
Heteronormativity
Historical eugenics
Internalized oppression
Intersectionality
Lesbian erasure
Masculism
Nazi concentration camp badge
Oikophobia
Oppression
Police brutality
Polyculturalism
Power distance
Prejudice
Prisoner abuse
Racial bias in criminal news in the United States
Racism by country
Racial color blindness
Religious intolerance
Second-generation gender bias
Snobbery
Social equity
Social exclusion
Social model of disability
Social privilege
Christian
male
white
Social stigma
Speciesism
Stereotype
The talk
Category
Commons
Political ideologies
Apoliticism
The Establishment
Anti
Hardline
Moderate
Political spectrum
Far-left
Left-wing
Centre-left
Centrism
Centre-right
Right-wing
Far-right
Radical
Reactionary
Revolutionary
Accelerationism
Agrarianism
Anarchism
Capitalism
Christian democracy
Communalism
Communism
Bolshevism
Marxism–Leninism
National Bolshevism
Communitarianism
Confucianism
Conservatism
Constitutionalism
Corporatism
Distributism
Social credit
Environmentalism
Familialism
Fascism
Nazism
Third Position
Feminism
Fundamentalism
Green
Hindutva
Islamism
Liberalism
Libertarianism
Marxism
Monarchism
Royalism
Nationalism
Republicanism
Classical
Modern
Social democracy
Socialism
Third Way
Zionism
See also
Authoritarianism
Anti
Collectivism
Colonialism
Culturalism
Inter
Mono
Multi
Extremism
Federalism
Confederalism
Confederatism
Globalism
Ideological repression
Imperialism
Individualism
Internationalism
Localism
Masculism
Militarism
Nihilism
Pacifism
Pluralism
Populism
Progressivism
Reformism
Regionalism
Separatism
Statism
Syncretism
Totalitarianism
Authority control databases
International
GND
FAST
National
United States
France
BnF data
Czech Republic
Spain
Latvia
Israel
Other
Historical Dictionary of Switzerland
NARA
Yale LUX
Retrieved from "
Categories
Feminism
1830s neologisms
Social theories
Feminist terminology
Hidden categories:
Wikipedia articles needing page number citations from August 2025
CS1 French-language sources (fr)
CS1 Dutch-language sources (nl)
Wikipedia articles needing page number citations from October 2012
All articles with dead external links
Articles with dead external links from June 2023
Articles with permanently dead external links
CS1 Swedish-language sources (sv)
Articles with short description
Short description is different from Wikidata
Wikipedia articles needing reorganization from May 2025
Wikipedia indefinitely semi-protected pages
Wikipedia indefinitely move-protected pages
Use Canadian English from April 2021
All Wikipedia articles written in Canadian English
Use dmy dates from January 2025
Pages using sidebar with the child parameter
All articles with unsourced statements
Articles with unsourced statements from March 2025
All articles with failed verification
Articles with failed verification from June 2023
Pages displaying short descriptions of redirect targets via Module:Annotated link
Pages using Sister project links with hidden wikidata
Wikipedia articles incorporating a citation from Collier's Encyclopedia
Wikipedia articles incorporating a citation from the Encyclopedia Americana with a Wikisource reference
Articles with excerpts
Feminism
Add topic