First Wave Feminism:
•Refers
to the 19th
and 20th
century when feminist activity took place.
•It
focused on legal issues, primarily on gaining women's
suffrage (the right to vote).
•The
term ‘first-wave’ was first used in the New York Times Magazine by Martha Lear
in March 1968.
•First
wave feminists spent hundreds of years working hard for the betterment and equality of their sex and gender.
First wave feminists wanted
the same rights as men. Main rights included suffrage, the right to vote, right
to themselves and their own bodies, the right to an education, the right to work and to work safely, the right to a divorce and the right to their children
•First
wave feminists didn't
believe in the society rules that an unmarried woman was the property of her
father and a married woman was the property of her husband.
•First
wave Feminism mainly focused on suffrage and changing the worlds view on gender
equality.
Second wave Feminism:
- Second-wave feminism was the period of feminist activity that first began in the early 1960s in the United States. Eventually spreading throughout the Western world and beyond. In the United States the movement lasted through the early 1980s. Second-wave feminism broadened the debate to a wide range of issues: sexuality, family, the workplace, reproductive rights, de facto inequalities, and official legal inequalities.
- Second-wave feminism drew attention to domestic violence and marital rape issues, establishment of rape crisis and battered women's shelters, and changes in custody and divorce law, as well as reinforcing issues from first wave feminism.
- Many historians view the second-wave feminist era in America as ending in the early 1980s with the intra-feminism disputes of the feminist sex wars over issues such as sexuality and pornography, which ushered in the era of third-wave feminism in the early 1990s.
Good research :)
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