Changes in Feminism

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Feminism is defined as the theory of the political, economic, and social equality of both standard genders. The feminist movement in America started in the late 1800s and spread in the early 1900s. In the beginning of the feminist movement, also known as woman's suffrage, they would hold conventions to try and convince people that women deserved equal rights. Those women and their supporters have fought hard for all the rights that they now possess. But it did not happen over night, it has taken hundreds of years and there are still some inequalities throughout the United States. There have been many great feminist role models such as: Susan B. Anthony, Margaret Sanger, and Eleanor Roosevelt. These women worked hard and During the start of feminism until the modern generations of young women, the ideology has always been about equality, but within the millennium that has changed to women who want to be better then their male counterparts.
The more I looked into the history of feminism and the shifts in the modern feminism, I started to wonder when did all of these changes start to happen and all of these new variations of feminism pop up into the modern culture. I starting doing research on that and there could be many reasons for all of these new coined terms that twist and reshape the definition of feminism. As I started to pick through the information that has been presented I believe that I was able to find out three different reasons that may be the cause of the shifts. Three reasons that might be the major causes of the shift in feminism are the differences in the time periods, the changes in role models, and the shift in ideology.
The first time period that I would like to discuss was the 1920s in America. The 1920s ...

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...hael. "Roaring Twenties Feminism." Suite101. N.p., 08 Dec 2013. Web. 10 Dec 2013. .
“The 1950s.” 2013. The History Channel website. Dec 10 2013, 11:19 http://www.history.com/topics/1950s. “The 1970s.” 2013. The History Channel website. Dec 11 2013, 12:54 http://www.history.com/topics/1970s.
"Alice Paul (1885-1977)." Education & Resources - National Women's History Museum. N.p.. Web. 11 Dec 2013. .
"Lucy Burns." Education & Resources - National Women. N.p.. Web. 11 Dec 2013. .
"Susan Brownell Anthony." Education & Resources - National Women. N.p.. Web. 11 Dec 2013. .

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