π Fact Sheet: Feminism — Multiple Waves
Overview • Waves • Thinkers • Variants (Marxist / Eco / Intersectional) • UGC-NET tips
Overview
Feminism is a collection of movements and theories that critique gender inequality and campaign for women's rights, bodily autonomy, social, political and economic equality. It developed in multiple waves with different emphases: legal rights, patriarchy & sexuality, intersectionality & identity, and digital/hashtag activism.
Key tags: Gender equality Reproductive rights Intersectionality
1st Wave — Liberal Feminism (19th & early 20th c.)
Core focus & demands
- Political and legal equality: voting rights (suffrage), property, education, employment, equal pay, legal rights in marriage and family.
Main thinkers & activists
- Mary Wollstonecraft — Vindication of the Rights of Woman (1792).
- Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Susan B. Anthony, Lucretia Mott, Lucy Stone — US suffrage leaders.
- Olympe de Gouges — Declaration of the Rights of Woman.
- J.S. Mill — The Subjection of Women (1869).
Remember: 1st wave = legal & formal equality (votes, property, franchise).
2nd Wave — Radical / Social Feminism (1960s–70s)
Core ideas
- Critique of patriarchy as a system; challenged socially constructed gender norms.
- Focused on reproductive rights, sexual liberation, domestic violence, workplace inequality.
- Slogan: “The personal is political.” — linked private experience to public structures.
Key texts & figures
- Betty Friedan — The Feminine Mystique (sparked US second wave).
- Simone de Beauvoir — The Second Sex (1949): “One is not born, but becomes, a woman.”
- Kate Millett — Sexual Politics (1971).
- Activists & theorists: Shulamith Firestone, Germaine Greer, Adrienne Rich.
Second wave emphasized structural sources of gender oppression and collective consciousness-raising.
3rd Wave — Post-modern / Intersectional (1990s–2010)
Core ideas
- Emphasis on intersectionality: overlapping oppressions of caste, class, race, sexuality, gender.
- Fluidity of gender, critique of universal womanhood, inclusion of LGBTQ+ rights.
- Focus on culture, media, beauty standards, and backlash analysis.
Key figures & works
- Rebecca Walker — “Becoming the Third Wave”.
- Eve Ensler — The Vagina Monologues.
- Naomi Wolf — The Beauty Myth; Susan Faludi — Backlash.
- Judith Butler — Gender Trouble (gender performativity).
- KimberlΓ© Crenshaw — coined intersectionality (Mapping the Margins).
- bell hooks, Angela Davis, Patricia Hill Collins — race, class & gender critiques.
3rd wave broadened feminism to cultural critique, identity politics, queer theory and global perspectives.
4th Wave — Digital / #MeToo (Since ~2010)
Focus & tactics
- Online activism, use of social/digital media (hashtag campaigns like #MeToo), mobilization against sexual harassment, rape culture, body-shaming.
- Promotes body positivity, intersectional solidarity, climate justice links, and global activism.
Prominent authors & campaigns
- Rebecca Solnit — Men Explain Things to Me; Laura Bates — Everyday Sexism.
- Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie — We Should All Be Feminists.
- Movements: #MeToo, online feminist zines, global youth protests.
4th wave is strongly digital, fast-moving and intersectional in practice.
Variants / Traditions
- Marxist / Socialist Feminism: Emphasizes class, property & production (Engels — The Origin of the Family, Private Property and the State). Key thinkers: Alexandra Kollontai, Sheila Rowbotham, Martha Nussbaum.
- Ecofeminism: Links exploitation of women & nature; coined by FranΓ§oise d’Γaubonne. Thinkers: Vandana Shiva, Maria Mies, Susan Griffin.
- Communitarian & Radical strands — focus on communal values & structural patriarchy.
- Feminist legal & justice critiques: Susan Moller Okin wrote on justice & family.
These traditions critique mainstream (often white, middle-class) feminism and stress class, race, ecology or community.
Key Concepts & Terms
- Personal is Political: private/domestic issues reflect public power structures.
- Intersectionality: overlapping identities produce unique forms of oppression.
- Gender performativity: (Butler) gender as enacted performance.
- Universal sisterhood: contested — criticized for erasing race/class differences.
Feminism in UGC-NET Past Questions (Quick Facts)
- Slogan “Personal is political” — linked with second wave / radical feminism.
- Post-colonial feminist reference: Chandra Talpade Mohanty (often asked).
- Susan Moller Okin — feminist critique of justice and family (reformulation of Rawls).
- Kate Millett — author of Sexual Politics (second-wave text).
- Vandana Shiva — associated with ecofeminism.
- Which wave talks about sexual politics? — Second wave / Radical feminism.
Representative Books & Authors
- Mary Wollstonecraft — Vindication of the Rights of Woman
- Simone de Beauvoir — The Second Sex
- Betty Friedan — The Feminine Mystique
- Kate Millett — Sexual Politics
- Germaine Greer — The Female Eunuch
- Judith Butler — Gender Trouble
- KimberlΓ© Crenshaw — Mapping the Margins (intersectionality)
- bell hooks — Ain't I a Woman?
- Vandana Shiva — Staying Alive (ecofeminism)
- Roxane Gay — Bad Feminist (contemporary critique)
Quick Revision Tags
Use these for flashcards: 1st Wave — Suffrage 2nd Wave — Patriarchy 3rd Wave — Intersectionality 4th Wave — #MeToo/Digital
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