The Second-Wave Feminism Movement

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The term feminism can be used to describe a political, cultural or economic movement aimed at establishing equal rights and legal protection for women. It involves political and sociological theories and philosophies that are associated with issues of gender disparity, as well as a movement that advocates gender equality for women and campaigns for women's rights and interests. According to Wikipedia, “feminist theory is the extension of feminism into theoretical, fictional, or philosophical discourse. It aims to understand the nature of gender inequality.”
This essay will seek to evaluate the contribution of feminist social thought to an understanding of gender relations in the 20th and early 21st centuries.
The history of feminist social thought emerged from political movements. Feminists and scholars have divided the movement's history into three "waves". The first wave refers mainly to women's suffrage movements of the 19th and early 20th centuries, the second wave refers to the ideas and actions associated with the women's liberation movement beginning in the 1960s the third wave refers to a continuation of, and a …show more content…

The second-wave feminism movement is connected with the women’s liberation movements of the 1960s and 1970s. Because women saw themselves as inheritors of the political influence of the first era which focused primarily on legal obstacles to women’s rights, feminists of the second-wave movement began concentrating on less legal barriers to gender equality, addressing issues like sexuality, reproductive rights, women’s roles and labor in the home, and patriarchal or men dominated

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