Introduction
The right to vote. Equal pay for equal work. Reproductive rights. Equal access to educational opportunities. Maternity leave. Those are just a few of the political and social advances feminism has made. Essentially, feminism is the belief and advocacy of equal rights for women. One of the first people to take such a stance was the Englishwoman Mary Wollstonecraft. Her treatise A Vindication of the Rights of Women (1792) outlined the complaints and paths for social equality that has been emulated around the world. “First Wave” feminism came to the United States in the late 1800s. Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Susan B. Anthony tirelessly worked for suffrage (the right to vote) until it was won in 1920. In the 1950s to 1980s, “Second Wave” feminism worked toward cultural integration and was led by activists such as Betty Friedan and Gloria Steinem in America and Simone de Beauvoir in France. Although many gains have been made, feminists still strive today toward the goal of complete social equality.
Essential Facts
- Seneca Falls, New York, was the location of Elizabeth Cady Stanton’s 1848 speech, “A Declaration of the Rights of Women,” which called for full political and social rights for women.
- Margaret Sanger began advocating for women’s reproductive rights in 1912 and is the founder of what is now known as Planned Parenthood.
- The National Organization for Women (NOW) was formed in 1966 and is the largest feminist organization in the United States. Betty Friedan was its first president.
- In the United States, feminists helped push through Title IX legislation in 1972, which gave young female athletes the same opportunities and access to funding as their male counterparts.
- Feminists still hope to pass the Equal Rights Amendment (ERA), which would guarantee protection under the law. The ERA has been before every session of the U.S. Congress since 1982 but has yet to pass.
Recommended Resources
All Resources by Category
- Art and Literature
- Articles
- Ecofeminism
- Feminism and Psychoanalysis
- Feminism Has Abandoned Its Original Principles
- Feminism Has Benefited Men
- Feminism Has Caused the Breakdown of the Family
- Feminism Has Expanded Women's Choices
- Feminism Has Harmed Men
- Feminism Has Limited Women's Choices
- Feminism Has Not Abandoned Its Original Principles
- Feminism Supports the Family
- Feminisms and Science
- Feminist Cosmology: Encyclopedia of Science and Religion
- feminist criticism: The Oxford Companion to English Literature
- Feminist Criticism: The Oxford Companion to Shakespeare
- Feminist Jurisprudence: West's Encyclopedia of American Law
- Feminist Theology: Encyclopedia of Science and Religion
- Maxine Kingston Hong on Feminism
- Maxine Kingston Hong on Feminism and Race
- Postmodernism Criticism | Feminist Contributions
- Women Should Embrace Feminism
- Women Should Reject Feminism
- Criticism
- Contemporary Feminist Criticism Criticism
- Ecofeminism and Nineteenth-Century Literature
- Errors and Labors: Feminism and Early Shakespearean Comedy
- Feminism Reflected in Literature
- Feminist Criticism - Poetry Essay
- Feminist Criticism of Shakespeare
- Feminist Interpretations: Shakespeare A to Z
- Feminist Literary Criticism Essay
- Feminist Long Fiction Essay
- Essays
- Ecofeminism Gives Life Purpose
- Eleanor Roosevelt, Volume One, 1884-1933 Principles of Feminist Biography
- Feminism and History in On Discovery
- Feminism as it Relates to Elizabethan and Jacobean Ideas About Women
- Feminism in Agatha Christie's Writing
- Feminist Science Fiction Essay
- Flesh and Feminism in the poem "Maternity"
- Grendel Grendel from a Feminist Perspective
- Much Ado about Nothing Feminist Criticism of Beatrice and Hero
- Old Worlds and New: Anti-Feminism in Watership Down
- Storytelling and Grace Paley's Feminism
- The Bean Trees Utopian and Feminist Ideals
- The Confluence of Folklore, Feminism, and Black Self-Determination in Zora Neale Hurston's Their Eyes Were Watching God
- The Edible Woman Feminine, Female, Feminist: From The Edible Woman to The Female Body
- The Great Gatsby: Jordan Baker & Feminism
- The Impact of Feminist Theater in Calm Down Mother
- The Not-so-Failed Feminism of Jean Auel in Clan of the Cave Bear
- The Struggle for Space: Feminism and Freedom in The House of the Spirits
- Time Travel as a Feminist Didactic in Works by Phyllis Eisenstein, Marlys Millhiser, and Octavia Butler
- Town and Country Lovers: The Feminist Aspect of Gordimer's Short Story
- What the Black Woman Thinks about Women's Lib.
- Yellow Woman as a Representation of the Literature of Ecofeminism.
- History
- 1980's: Feminism Flounders
- D'Eaubonne Coins the Term Ecofeminism
- Feminism and the Sexual Revolution
- Feminism: The Fight for Suffrage
- Salem on History: Feminism and Feminists
- Major Authors
- Other
- Feminism
- Feminism and Metadrama Role-Playing in Blood Relations
- Feminism Overcomes
- Feminism Without Illusions
- Feminism Without Illusions
- Power Feminism
- Realism and Feminism in the Progressive Era
- Susan Glaspell's The Verge: An Experiment in Feminism
- Overview
- Primary Sources
- Feminist Perspectives: The Sixties in America Primary Sources
- The Feminist Movement in the 20th Century | Roe V. Wade (Legal Decision Date 1973): Feminism in Literature
- Quotations
- Reviews
