Social Studies | 2023 | | Social Studies |
2023 | | Social Studies |
2023 | | Social Studies |
2023 | : | Sociology |
2023 | | Sociology |
2023 | | Theater, Dance & Media |
2023 | | Theater, Dance & Media |
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2022 | | |
2022 | | African and African-American Studies |
2022 | | African and African-American Studies |
2022 | | Government |
2022 | | Government |
2022 | | History |
2022 | | History and Literature |
2022 | | History and Science |
2022 | | Social Studies |
2022 | | Social Studies |
2022 | | Social Studies |
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2021 | Gender Codes: Exploring Malaysia’s Gender Parity in Computer Science | Computer Science |
2021 | The Voice of Technology: Understanding The Work Of Feminine Voice Assistants and the Feminization of the Interface | Computer Science |
2021 | Whose Voices, Whose Values? Environmental Policy Effects Ofextra-Community Sovereignty Advocacy | Environmental Science and Public Policy |
2021 | “Felons, Not Families”: The Construction of Immigrant Criminality in Obama-Era Policies and Discourses, 2011-2016 | History and Literature |
2021 | Seeing Beyond the Binary: The Photographic Construction of Queer Identity in Interwar Paris and Berlin | History and Literature |
2021 | Iconic Market Women: The Unsung Heroines of Post-Colonial Ghana (1960s-1990s) | History and Literature: Ethnic Studies |
2021 | From Stove Polish to the She-E-O: The Historical Relationship Between the American Feminist Movement and Consumer Culture | Social Studies |
2021 | “Interstitial Existence,” De-Personification, and Black Women’s Resistance to Police Brutality | Social Studies |
2021 | #Metoo Meets #Blm: Understanding Black Feminist Anti-Violence Activism in the United States | Social Studies |
2021 | "Why Won’t Anyone Fight For Us?”: A Contemporary Class Analysis of the Positions and Politics of H-1b and H-4 Visa Holders | Social Studies |
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2020 | A Feminist Scientific Exploration of Minority Stress and Eating Pathology in Transgender Adolescents | |
2020 | From Decolonization to LGBTQ + Liberation: LGBTQ+ Activism, Colonial History and National Identity in Guyana | |
2020 | La Pocha, Sin Raíces / Spoiled Fruit, Without Roots: A Genealogy of Tejana Borderland Imaginaries | Anthropology |
2020 | Capturing Authenticity in Indian Transmasculine Identity: Design of a Novel Penile Prosthesis | Biomedical Engineering |
2020 | More Than Missing: Analyzing Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women Policy Trajectories in the United States and Canada, 2015-2019 | Government |
2020 | “Almost Perfect”: The Cleansing and Erasure of Undocumented and Queer Identities through Performance of Model Families and Citizensh | History & Literature |
2020 | "He Needs a New Belt:” Queerness, Homonationalism, and the Racial and Sexual Dimensions of Passing in Israeli Cinema | History & Literature |
2020 | Our Healthy Bodies, Our Healthy Selves: Community Women's Health Centers as Collaborative Sites of Politics, Education, and Care | History of Science |
2020 | “No Way to Speak of Myself”: Lived and Literary Resistance to Gender in French | Romance Languages and Literatures |
2020 | Through Eastern European Eyes and Under the Western Gaze: The (Un)Feminist Face of the Russo-Ukrainian War | Slavic Languages and Literatures |
2020 | Subversion and Subordination: The Materialization of the YouTube Beauty Community in Everyday Reality | Social Studies |
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2019 | Mirror, Mirror, On The Wall, Why Can’t I See Myself At All?: A Close Reading of Children’s Picture Books Featuring Gender Expansive Children of Color | African and African-American Studies |
2019 | Dilating Health, Healthcare, and Well-Being: Experiences of LGBTQ+ Thai People | Biomedical Engineering |
2019 | The Consociationalist Culprit: Explaining Women’s Lack of Political Representation in Northern Ireland | Government |
2019 | Queering the Political Sphere: Play, Performance, and Civil Society with the Sisters of Perpetual Indulgence in San Francisco, 1979-1999 | Government |
2019 | Playing With Power: Kink, Race, and Desire | History and Literature |
2019 | “Take Root:” Community Formation at the San Francisco Chinatown Branch Public Library, 1970s-1990s | History and Literature |
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2018 | Fetal Tomfoolery: Comedy, Activism, and Reproductive Justice in the Pro-Abortion Work of the Lady Parts Justice League | |
2018 | And They're Saying It's Because of the Internet: An Exploration of Sexuality Urban Legends Online | Folklore and Mythology |
2018 | (In)visibly Queer: Assessing Disparities in the Adjudication of U.S. LGBTQ Asylum Cases | Government |
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2017 | Enough for Today | |
2017 | Radical Appropriations: A Cultural History and Critical Theorization of Cultural Appropriation in Drag Performance | |
2017 | Surviving Safe Spaces: Exploring Survivor Narratives and Community-Based Responses to LGBTQ Intimate Partner Violence | |
2017 | “The Cruelest of All Pains”: Birth, Compassion, and the Female Body in | English |
2017 | Virtually Normal? How “Initiation” Shapes the Pursuit of Modern Gay Relationships | Social Studies |
2017 | How Stigma Impacts Mental Health: The Minority Stress Model and Unwed Mothers in South Korea | Sociology |
2017 | The Future is Taken Care of: Care Robots, Migrant Workers, and the Re-production of Japanese Identity | Visual and Environmental Studies |
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2016 | Bodies on the Line: Empowerment through Collective Subjectification in Women's Rugby Culture | |
2016 | "In the Middle of the Movement": Advocating for Sexuality and Reproductive Health Rights in the Nonprofit Industrial Complex | Anthropology |
2016 | Breaking the Equator: Formation and Fragmentation of Gender and Race in Indigenous Ecuador | Social Studies |
2016 | Deconstructing the American Dream: in Kodak Advertisements and Shirley Cards in Post World War II American Culture | Visual and Environmental Studies |
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2015 | Imposing Consent: Past Paradigms, Gender Norms, and the Continuing Conflation of Health and Genital Appearance in Medical Practice for Intersex Infants | |
2015 | And I am Telling You, You Can’t Stop the Beat: Locating Narratives of Racial Crossover in Musical Theater | History and Literature |
2015 | Reality® Check: Shifting Discourses of “Female Empowerment” in the History of the Reality Female Condom, 1989-2000 | History and Science |
2015 | Dialectics of a Feminist Future | Literature |
2015 | Lesbian Against the Law: Indian Lesbian Activism and Film, 1987-2014 | Literature |
2015 | Talking Dirty: Using the Pornographic to Negotiate Sexual Discourse in Public and Private | Philosophy |
2015 | Wars Are Fought, They Are Also Told: A Study of 9/11 and the War on Terrorism in U.S. History Textbooks | Social Studies |
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2014 | Yoko as a Narrator in Nobuyoshi Araki’s and | |
2014 | Reading at an Angle: Theorizing Young Women Reading Science-Fictionally | English and American Literature |
2014 | “Are you Ready to be Strong?”: Images of Female Empowerment in 1990s Popular Culture | History and Literature |
2014 | Constructing the Harvard Man: Eugenics, the Science of Physical Education, and Masculinity at Harvard, 1879-1919 | History and Science |
2014 | Sex, Science, and Politics in the Sociobiology Debate | History and Science |
2014 | "A Little Bit of Sodomy in Me”: Disgust, Loss, and the Politics of Redemption in the American Ex-Gay Movement | Religion |
2014 | Art of Disturbance: Trans-Actions on the Stage of the US-Mexico Border | Romance Languages and Literatures |
2014 | “Too Important for Politics”: The Implications of “Autonomy” in the Indian Women’s Movement | Social Studies |
2014 | Yes, No, Maybe: The Politics of Consent Under Compulsory Sex-Positivity | Social Studies |
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2013 | Inside the Master's House: Gender, Sexuality, and the 'Impossible' History of Slavery in Jamaica, 1753-1786 | |
2013 | Illuminating the Darkness Beneath the Lamp: Im Yong-sin’s Disappearance from History and Rewriting the History of Women in Korea’s Colonial Period (1910-1945) | East Asian Languages and Civilizations |
2013 | "How to Survive a Plague": Navigating AIDS in Mark Doty's Poetry | English and American Literature |
2013 | Respectability's Girl: Images of Black Girlhood Innocence, 1920-2013 | History and Literature |
2013 | Defining Our Own Lives: The Racial, Gendered, and Postcolonial Experience of Black Women in the Netherlands | Social Studies |
2013 | Beyond Victim-Blaming: Strategies of Rape Response through Narrative | Sociology |
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2012 | From “Ultimate Females” to “Be(ing) Me”: Uncovering Australian Intersex Experiences and Perspectives | |
2012 | Modernity on Trial: Sodomy and Nation in Malaysia | |
2012 | : Woven Accounts of Gender, Work and Motherhood in South Korea | |
2012 | Sexual Apartheid: Marginalized Identity(s) in South Africa's HIV/AIDS Interventions | |
2012 | The Pornographer's Tools: A Critical and Artistic Response to the Pornography of Georges Bataille and Anaïs Nin | |
2012 | Cerebral interhemispheric connectivity and autism: A laboratory investigation of Dkk3 function in the postmitotic development of callosal projection neuron subpopulations and a historical analysis of the reported male prevalence of autism and the “extreme male brain” theory | Stem Cell and Regenerative Biology |
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2011 | "Let's Just Invite Them In" versus "We Just Don't Have the Resources to Support You": Selective and Non-Selective College Administrators as Creators of Alcohol Policies and Practices, Campus Cultures, and Students' Identities, and Implications for Opportunities in Higher Education | |
2011 | Plaintiffs' Role in Reinventing Legal Arguments for Same-Sex Marriage | |
2011 | Facing Tijuana's Maquilas: An Inquiry into Embodied Viewership of the US-Mexico Border | Romance Languages and Literatures |
2011 | "The Woman Who Shouts": Coming to Voice as a Young Urban Female Leader | Social Studies |
2011 | Closet Communities: A Study of Queer Life in Cairo | Social Studies |
2011 | Redefining Survival: Statistics and the Language of Uncertainty at the Height of the AIDS Epidemic | Statistics |
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2010 | A Genealogy of Gay Male Representation from the Lavender Scare to Lavender Containment | |
2010 | More Than "Thoughts by the Way": Young Women and the Overland Journey Finding Themselves Through Narrative Voice, 1940-1870 | |
2010 | Que(e)rying Harvard Men, 1941-1951: A Project on Oral Histories | |
2010 | When Welfare Queens Speak: Survival Rhetoric in the Face of Domination | African and African American Studies |
2010 | ACT UP New York: Art, Activism and the AIDS Crisis, 1987-1993 | Visual and Environmental Studies |
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2009 | "Gay, Straight, or Lying?": The Cultural Silencing of Male Bisexuality in America | |
2009 | "I had never seen a beautiful woman with just one breast": Beauty and Norms of Femininity in Popular Breast Cancer Narratives | |
2009 | Diego Garcia: Islands of Empire, Archipelagos of Resistance | |
2009 | Zion Sexing Palestine | |
2009 | Are You Sisters?: Motherhood, Sisterhood, and the Impossible Black Lesbian Subject | African and African American Studies |
2009 | Girl Interpellated: Female Childhoods and the Trauma of Nationalist Subjectivity | History and Literature |
2009 | Breaching the Subject of Birth: An Examination of Undergraduate Women's Perceptions of "Alternative" Birthing Methods | Sociology |
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2008 | Biomedicalizing the Labor of Love: Narratives of Maternal Disability and Reproduction | |
2008 | Dis/locating the Margins: Gloria Anzaldúa and New Potential for Feminist Pedagogy | |
2008 | Mommy, Where Do Babies Come From? Egg Donation and Popular Constructions of Authentic Motherhood | |
2008 | Parallel Histories and Mutual Lessons: Advocates Negotiate Feminism and Domestic Violence Services in Immigrant Communities in Boston | |
2008 | SILENCE=DEATH: (Re)Presentations of "The AIDS Epidemic" 1981-1990 | |
2008 | The "Sparrow in the Cage": Images of the Emaciated Body in Representations of Anorexia Nervosa | |
2008 | Theater of the Abject: The Powers of Horror in Sarah Kane's | |
2008 | Toward a Participatory Framework for Inclusive Citizenship: Haitian Immigrant Women's Claim to Civic Space in Boston | |
2008 | "Keepin' it Real," Queering the Real: Queer Hip Hop and the Performance of Authenticity | African and African American Studies |
2008 | On the Surface: Conceptualizing Gender and Subjectivity in Chinese Lesbian Culture | East Asian Languages and Civilization |
2008 | Viewing Post-War Black Politics Through a New Lens: Tracing Changes in Ann Perry's Conception of the Mother-Child Relationship, 1943-1965 | History and Literature |
2008 | Silent Families and Invisible Sex: Christian Nationalism and the 2004 Texas Sex Education Battle | Social Studies |
2008 | White 2.0: Theorizing White Feminist Blogging | Social Studies |
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2007 | Do Mothers Experience The Mommy Wars?: An Examination of the Media's Claims About the Mommy Wars and the Mothers Who Supposedly Fight In Them | |
2007 | On The Offense: The Apologetic Defense and Women's Sports | |
2007 | Stop Being Polite & Start Getting "Real": Examining Madonna & Black Culture Appropriation in the MTV Generation | |
2007 | The Inviability of Balance: Performing Female Political Candidacy | |
2007 | The Money Taboo | English |
2007 | Somewhere Over the Rainbow Nation: The Dynamics of the Gay and Lesbian Movement and the Countermovement After a Decade of Democracy in South Africa | Government |
2007 | Facing The Empress: Modern Representations of Women, Power and Ideology In Dynasty China | Religion |
2007 | Re-Evaluating Homosexuality: Extralegal Factors in Conservative Jewish Law | Social Studies |
2007 | Who's Producing Your Knowledge?: Filipina American Scholars | Social Studies |
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2006 | "The Potential of Universality": Discovering Gender Fluidity Through Performance | |
2006 | Coming Out of the Candlelight: Erasure, Politics, and Practice at the 2005 Boston Transgender Day of Remembrance | |
2006 | May Our Daughters Return Home: Transnational Organizing to Halt Femicide in Ciudad Juarez | |
2006 | She Let It Happen: An Analysis of Rape Myth Acceptance among Women | Anthropology |
2006 | "This is no time for the private point of view": Vexing the Confessional in the Poetry of Sylvia Plath and Anne Sexton | History and Literature |
2006 | Relying on the Experts: The Hidden Motives of Tampon Manufacturers, Feminist Health Activists and the Medical Community During the American Toxic Shock Epidemic from 1978- 1982 | History of Science |
2006 | (In)visibility: Identity Rights and Subjective Experience in Gay Beirut | Social Studies |
2006 | Popular Feminism in the Dominican Republic | Social Studies |
2006 | Redefining the 'Crisis in Citizenship': The Emergence of Immigrant Women as Political Actors in the United States | Social Studies |
2006 | The New Goddess: Women, Progress, and Patriarchy in the Hindu Nationalist Movement | Social Studies |
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2005 | "Takin' Back the Night!" Buffy the Vampire Slayer and "Girl Power" Feminism | |
2005 | Bread Winners or Bread Makers? The Professional Challenges for Working Women | |
2005 | Power to the People! Or Not: The Exceptional Decrease in Women’s Formal and Informal Political Participation in Slovenia During Democratization | |
2005 | To Whom Many Doors Are Still Locked: Gender, Space & Power in Harvard Final Clubs | |
2005 | Coca Politics: Women's Leadership in the Chapare | Anthropology |
2005 | Redressing Prostitution: Trans Sex Work and the Fragmentation of Feminist Theories | Government |
2005 | The Media Coverage of Women, Ten Years Later, in the 108th Congress, Has Anything Changed Since 'The Year of the Women' in 1992 | Government |
2005 | Divided Designs: Separatism, Intersectionality, and Feminist Science in the 1970s | History of Science |
2005 | Completing the Circle: Singing Women's Universality and the Music of Libana | Music |
2005 | Attitudes, Beliefs and Behavior Towards Gays and Lesbians | Psychology |
2005 | Beauty and Brains: The Influence of Stereotypical Portraits of Women on Implicit Cognition | Psychology |
2005 | "Rational Kitchens" How Scientific Kitchen Designs Reconfigured Domestic Space and Subjectivity from the White City to the New Frankfurt | Social Studies |
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2004 | Begin By Imagining: Reflections of Women in the Holocaust | |
2004 | Feminism within the Frame: An Analysis of Representations of Women in the Art of Americas Collection at the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston | History of Art and Architecture |
2004 | The Fluid Body: Gender, Agency, and Embodiment in Chöd Ritual | Religion |
2004 | Parodic Patriotism and Ambivalent Assimilation: A Rereading of Mary Antin's The Promised Land | Romance Languages and Literatures |
2004 | Virgin, Mother, Warrior: The Virgin of Guadalupe as an Icon of the Anti- Abortion Movement | Romance Languages and Literatures |
2004 | Feminist Evolutions: An exploration and response to the disconnect between young women and contemporary dominant feminism | Social Studies |
2004 | Public Enemies: South Asian and Arab Americans Navigate Racialization and Cultural Citizenship After 9/11 | Social Studies |
2004 | The Blue Stockinged Gal of Yesterday is Gone: Life-course Decision-making and Identity Formation of 1950s Radcliffe College Graduates | Social Studies |
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2003 | At the Narrative Center of Gravity: Stories and Identities of Queer Women of Color | |
2003 | Embodying the Psyche, Envisioning the Self: Race, Gender, and Psychology in Postwar American Women’s Fiction | |
2003 | From Many Mouths to Her Mind: Pursuits of Selfhood, the American Woman, and the Self-Help Book | |
2003 | Out of Love: The Permissibility of Abuse in Love and Self Development | |
2003 | Promising Monsters, Perilous Motherhood: The Social Construction of 20th Century Multiple Births | |
2003 | Sexing the Gender Dysphoric Body: A Developmental Examination of Gender Identity Disorder of Childhood | |
2003 | The Specter of Homoeroticism: Recasting Castration in David Fincher's 'Fight Club' | |
2003 | Women's Occupational Health: A Study of Latina Immigrant Janitors at Harvard | Biology |
2003 | Accidental Bodies | English |
2003 | Transformations in the Polish Female Gender Model from Communism to Democracy | History of Science |
2003 | Between Nation and World: Organizing Against Domestic Violence in China | Social Studies |
2003 | The Process of Becoming: Cultural Identity-Formation Among Second-Generation South Asian Women in the Contexts of Marriage and Family | Social Studies |
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2002 | A Turn of the Page: Contemporary Women’s Reading Groups in America | |
2002 | Bordering Home | |
2002 | Canary in a Coal Mine: The Mixed Race Woman in American History and Literature | |
2002 | Reflections in Yellow | |
2002 | My Rights Don't Just Come to Me: Palestinian Women Negotiating Identity | Anthropology |
2002 | “Progressive Conservatism”: The Intersection of Boston Women's Involvement in Anti-Suffrage and Progressive Reform, 1908 - 1920 | History |
2002 | “What Can a Woman Do?”: Gender, Youth, and Citizenship at Women's Colleges During World War I | History |
2002 | Building Strong Community: A Study of Queer Groups at Northeastern, Brandeis, and Harvard | Sociology |
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2001 | Taking Care: Stereotypes, Medical Care, and HIV+ Women | |
2001 | Of Tongues Untied: Stories Told and Retold by Working-Class Women | |
2001 | On Display: Deconstructing Modes of Fashion Exhibition | |
2001 | The Un-Candidates: Gender and Outsider Signals in Women's Political Advertisements | |
2001 | Tugging at the Seams: Feminist Resistance in Pornography | |
2001 | Witnessing Memory': Narrating the Realities of Immigrant and Refugee Women | |
2001 | “La Revolution Tranquille”: Concubinage: The Renegotiation of Gender and the Deregulation of Conjugal Kinship in the Contemporary French Household | Anthropology |
2001 | What is “natural” about the menstrual cycle? | Anthropology |
2001 | Multi-Drug Resistance in Malaria: Identification and Characterization of a Putative ABC-Transporter in Plasmodium falciparum | Biology |
2001 | “We Was Girls Together”: The Role of Female Friendship in Nella Larsen's and Toni Morrison's | English |
2001 | Pom-Pom Power--The History of Cheerleading at Harvard | History |
2001 | Conception of Gender in Artificial Intelligence | History of Science |
2001 | “Hysterilization”: Hysterectomy as Sterilization in the 1970s United States | History of Science |
2001 | What's Blood Got to Do with It? Menarche, Menstrual Attitudes, Experiences, and Behaviors | Psychology |
2001 | Facing the Screen: Portrayals of Female Body Image on Websites for Teenagers | Sociology |
2001 | They're Not Those Kinds of Girls: The Absence of Physical Pleasure in Teenage Girls' Sexual Narratives | Sociology |
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2000 | (Re)Writing Woman: Confronting Gender in the Czech Masculine Narrative | |
2000 | “Like a Nuprin: Little, Yellow, Queer”: The Case for Queer Asian American Autobiofictional Performance | |
2000 | Sex, Mothers, and Bodies: Chilean Sex Workers Voicing their Honor | Anthropology |
2000 | Mapping his Manila: Feminine Geographies of the City in Nick Joaquin's | English |
2000 | Precious Mettle: Margaret DeWitt, Susanna Townsend, and Mary Jane Megquier Negotiate Environment, Refinement & Femininity in Gold Rush California | History |
2000 | From to : Analyzing the Aesthetics of Spoken Word Poetry | History and Literature |
2000 | The Hymeneal Seal: Embodying Female Virginity in Early Modern England | History of Science |
2000 | Suit Her Up, She's Ready to Play: How the Woman-in-a-Suit Tackles Social Binaries | Social Studies |
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1999 | "From the Bones of Memory": Women's Stories to the South African Truth and Reconciliation Commission | |
1999 | "When We Get Married, We'll Live Next Door to Each Other": Adolescence, Girl-Friends, and "Lesbian" Desires | |
1999 | Healthy Bodies, Healthy Lives: The Women's Health Initiative and the Politics of Science | |
1999 | Adah Isaacs Menken, The [Un]True Stories: History, Identity, Memory, Menken, and Me | Afro-American Studies |
1999 | Situated Science: Margaret Cavendish and Natural Philosophical Discourse | English |
1999 | From "Sympathizers" to Organizers: The Emergence of the Women's Liberation Movement from the New Left at Harvard-Radcliffe | History |
1999 | Re-(e)valu[ate/ing] Madonna: Understanding the Success of Post-Modernity's Greatest Diva | Music |
1999 | "Let's Not Change the Subject!": Deliberation on Abortion on the Web, in the House and in Abortion Dialogue Groups | Social Studies |
1999 | A Socialist-Feminist Re-vision: An Integration of Socialist Feminist and Psychoanalytic Accounts of Women's Oppression | Social Studies |
1999 | Common Visions, Differing Priorities, Challenging Dynamics: An Examination of a Low-Income Immigrant Women's Cooperative Project | Sociology |
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1998 | "I Don't Want to Grow Up - If It's Like That": Carson McCullers's Construction of Female Adolescence and Women's Coming of Age | |
1998 | Another Toxic Shock: Health Risks from Rayon and Dioxin in Chlorine Bleached Tampons Manufactured in the United States, a Public Policy Analysis | |
1998 | Damned Beauties of the Roaring Twenties: The Death of Young, White, Urban, American Women and | |
1998 | Just Saying No? A Closer Look at the Messages of Three Sexual Abstinence Programs | |
1998 | The Cost of Making Money: Exploring the Dissociative Tendencies of College Educated Strippers | |
1998 | Whose Sexuality? Masochistic Sexual Fantasies and Notions of Feminist Subjectivity | |
1998 | That Takes Balls…or Does it? A Historical and Endocrinologic Examination of the Relation of Androgens to Confidence in Males and Females | Anthropology |
1998 | black tar/and honey: Anne Sexton in Performance | English |
1998 | Redefining the Politics of Presence: The Case of Indian Women in Panchayati Raj Institutions | Government |
1998 | The Psychic Connection: The historical evolution of the psychic hotline in terms of gender, spirituality, and talk therapy | History |
1998 | Visions and Revisions of Love: and the Crisis of Heterosexual Romance | Visual and Environmental Studies |
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1997 | "I Feel it in My Bones That You are Making History": The Life and Leadership of Pauli Murray | |
1997 | "Reports from the Front: Welfare Mothers Up in Arms": A Case Study with Policy Implications | |
1997 | All the Weapons I Carry 'Round with Me: Five Adult Women Survivors of Childhood Sexual Abuse Speak about Their Experiences with Impact Model Mugging | |
1997 | : Manufacturing Multiplicity from American Fashion Magazines | |
1997 | Listening to Stories of Prison: The HIV Epidemic in MCI-Framingham | |
1997 | The Communicating Wire: Bell Telephone, Farm Wives, and the Struggle for Rural Telephone Service | |
1997 | When I Grow Up I Want to Be a Good Girl: Adolescent Fiction and Patriarchal Notions of Womanhood | |
1997 | Out of the Courtroom and onto the Ballot: The Politicization of the 1930s and '40s Massachusetts Birth Control Movement | History |
1997 | "The Role For Which God Created Them": Women in the United States' Religious Right | Social Studies |
1997 | Potent Vulnerability: American Jewry and the Romance with Diaspora | Social Studies |
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1996 | "I Certainly Try and Make the Most of it": An Exploratory Study of Teenage Mothers Who Have Remained in High School | |
1996 | In Their Own Words: Life and Love in the Literary Transactions of Adolescent Girls | |
1996 | Math/Theory: Constructing a Feminist Epistemology of Mathematics | |
1996 | Mirror, Mirror on the Wall…" Nella Larsen, Alice Walker, and the Self-Representation of Black Female Sexuality | |
1996 | Racial Iconography and Feminist Film: A Cultural Critique of Independent Women's Cinema | |
1996 | Real Plums in an Imaginary Cake: Mary McCarthy and the Writing of Autobiography | |
1996 | Single-Mother Poverty: A Critical Analysis of Current Welfare Theory and Policy from a Feminist, Cultural Perspective | |
1996 | Intra-household Resource Allocations in South Africa: Is There a Gender Bias? | Economics |
1996 | Vision and Revision: The Naked Body and the Borders of Sex and Gender | English |
1996 | Are Abusive Men Different? And Can We Predict Their Behavior? | Psychology |
1996 | Racial Iconography and Feminist Film: A Cultural Critique of Independent Women's Cinema | Visual and Environmental Studies |
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1995 | "What Does a Girl Do?": Teenage Girls' Voices in the Girl Group Music of the 1950s and '60s | |
1995 | Continuing the Struggle: Gender Equality in an Egalitarian Community | |
1995 | Elements of Community: Re-entering the Landscape of Utah Mormonism | |
1995 | Loving and Living Surrealism: Reuniting Leonora Carrington and Max Ernst | |
1995 | Reading the Body: The Physiological Politics of Gender in Charlotte Bronte's , Margaret Oliphant's , and Mary Braddon's | |
1995 | Searching for a Place Apart: A Journey into and out of Bulimia Nervosa | |
1995 | The Flagstad Case | |
1995 | The Sound Factory | |
1995 | Visual Strategies of the Contemporary U.S. Abortion Conflict | |
1995 | Working Women, Legitimate Lives: The Gender Values Underlying 1994 Welfare Reform | |
1995 | The Hormone Replacement Therapy Decision: Women at the Crossroads of Women's Health | Anthropology |
1995 | The Economic Consequences of Domestic Violence | Economics |
1995 | "It's My Skin": Gender, Pathology, and the Jewish Body in Holocaust Narratives | English |
1995 | Essentialist Tensions: Feminist Theories of the "Maleness" of Philosophy | Philosophy |
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1994 | Differences Among Friends: International feminists, USAID, and Nigerian women | |
1994 | Helke Sander and the Roots of Change: Gaining a Foothold for Women Filmmakers in Postwar Germany | |
1994 | On Dorothy Allison's and Literary Theory on Pain and Witnessing | |
1994 | Redefining : A Study of Chicana Identity and the Malinche Image | |
1994 | The Feminist Critique of the Birth Control Pill | |
1994 | The Re-visited: Women Villains in Contemporary Hollywood Cinema | |
1994 | The Framings of Ethel Rosenberg: Gender, Law, Politics, and Culture in Cold War America | |
1994 | Tradition and Transgression: Gender Roles in Ballroom Dancing | |
1994 | When Pregnancy is a Crime: Addiction, Pregnancy and the Law | |
1994 | Strategic Sentiments: Javanese Women and the Anthropology of Emotion | Anthropology |
1994 | Engendering Bodies in Pain: Trauma and Silence in Dorothy Allison's | English |
1994 | The Flowers of Middle Summer | English |
1994 | Conceptions of Self, Relationships and Gender Roles in Japanese American Women in California and Hawaii | Psychology |
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1993 | Bad Mothers and Wicked (wo)Men: Facts and Fictions about Serial Killers | |
1993 | Child of Imagination: Literary Analysis of Woolf, Steedman, Rich & Gilligan | |
1993 | Gender Roles on Trial During the Reign of Terror | |
1993 | Grief and Rage: The Politics of Death and the Political Implications of Mourning | |
1993 | Jewels in the Net: Women Bringing Relation into the Light of American Buddhist Practice | |
1993 | Mamas Fighting for Freedom in Kenya | |
1993 | Rethinking "Feminine Wiles": Sexuality and Subversion in the Fiction of Jane Bowles | |
1993 | Sexing the Machine: Feminism, Technology, and Postmodernism | |
1993 | Sisterhood is Robin? The Politics of the Woman-Centered Feminist Discourse in the New Ms. Magazine | |
1993 | "Thank God for Technology!" Taking a Second Look at the Technocratic Birth Experience | |
1993 | Where She Slept These Many Years | |
1993 | Women's Narratives of Anger: Exploring the Relationship between Anger and Self | |
1993 | Edith Wharton's : Gendered Paradoxes and Resistance to Representation | English |
1993 | Sociocognitive and Motivational Influences on Gender-Linked Conduct | Psychology |
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1992 | Conceptions of the Female Self: A Struggle Between Dominant and Resistant Forces | |
1992 | Objectified Subjects: Women in AIDS Clinical Drug Trials | |
1992 | Re-membering the American Dream: Woman in the Process of Placing a Beam in a Bag | |
1992 | : Voices of Resistance | |
1992 | Women and War | |
1992 | Women of the Cloister, Women of the World: American Benedictines in Transition | |
1992 | The Changing Lives of Palestinian Women in the Galilee: Reflections on Some Aspects of Modernization by Three Generations | Anthropology |
1992 | Blending the Spectrum: An Interdisciplinary Approach to Women and HIV Disease | Biology |
1992 | Maestra: Five Female Orchestral Conductors in the United States | Music |
1992 | Negotiating Identity: Multiracial People Challenging the Discourse | Social Studies |
1992 | Pain, Privacy, and Photography: Approaches to Picturing the Experiences of Battered Women | Visual and Environmental Studies |
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1991 | Incest and the Denial of Paternal Fallibility in Psychoanalysis and Feminist Theory | |
1991 | Sex and the Ivory Girl: Judy Blume Speaks to the Erotics of Disembodiment in Adolescent Girls' Discourses of Sexual Desire | |
1991 | Women's Secrets, Feminine Desires: Narrative Hiding and Revealing in Frances Burney's , Emily Bronte's , and Mary Braddon's | |
1991 | Workers, Mothers and Working Mothers: The Politics of Fetal Protection in the Workplace | |
1991 | Appalachian Identity: A Contested Discourse | Anthropology |
1991 | Half-Baked in Botswana: Why Cookstoves Aren't Heating Up the Kitchen | Economics |
1991 | "Management of Men": Political Wives in British Parliamentary Politics, 1846-1867 | History |
1991 | re:Visions of Feminism: An Analysis of Contemporary Film and Video Directed by Asian American Women | Social Studies |
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1990 | A Mini-Revolution: hemlines, gender identity, and the 1960s | |
1990 | Feeding Women and Children First: A Study of the Special Supplemental Food Program for Women, Infants and Children | |
1990 | On Refracting a Voice: Readings of Tatiana Tolstaia | |
1990 | Private Lives in Public Spaces: Marie Stopes, The Mothers' Clinics, and the Practice of Contraception | |
1990 | : Meaning and Community Re-orient/ed | |
1990 | With Child: Women's Experiences of Childbirth from Personal, Historical, and Cultural Perspectives | |
1990 | Representing "Miss Lizzie": Class and Gender in the Borden Case | History and Literature |
1990 | Seductive Strategies: Towards an Interactive Model of Consumerism | History and Literature |
1990 | Nancy Chodorow's Theory Examined: Contraceptive Use Among Sexually Active Adolescents | Psychology |
1990 | Choosing Sides: Massachusetts Activists Formulate Opinions on the Abortion Issue | Social Studies |
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1989 | Influence of Early Hollywood Films on Women's Roles in America | |
1989 | Rethinking Sex and Gender in a World of Women without Men: Changing Consciousness and Incorporation of the Feminine in Three Utopias by Women | |
1989 | A Different Voice in Politics: Women As Elites | Government |
1989 | The Lady Teaches Well: Middle-Class Women and the Sunday School Movement in England, 1780-1830 | History |
1989 | The Analytical Muse: Historiography, Gender and Science in the Life of Lady Ada Lovelace | History of Science |
1989 | The Tragic Part of Happiness: The Construction of the Subject in | Literatures |
1989 | The Ideology of Gender Roles in Contemporary Mormonism: Feminist Reform and Traditional Reaction | Religion |
| | |
1988 | La fonction génératrice: French Feminism, Motherhood, and Legal Reform, 1880-1914. | |
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Feminism Dissertation Topics – Choose The Best Topic For Your Dissertation
Published by Owen Ingram at January 2nd, 2023 , Revised On June 5, 2024
Feminism is a historical, social, and political movement founded by women to achieve gender equality and remove injustice. Feminism is an important topic that has been frequently debated in a male-dominated society since the nineteenth century. However, in recent years, the feminist voice has become louder, and feminist issues have grown in popularity.
An excellent feminist research topic is all you need to write a feminist dissertation. Feminism, in general, is a broad subject that examines the challenges women confront, such as sexual harassment, oppression, repression, stereotyping, sexual objectification, and other types of political and social oppression.
As the subject is vast, selecting a feminist topic for a dissertation or research paper is a difficult challenge. So, to assist you, we have compiled a list of relevant feminist research paper topics for your perusal.
You can also visit these links to get the best dissertation ideas for extensive research about sexual harassment dissertation topics and human rights dissertation ideas .
Latest Dissertation Topics On Feminism
- How effective are trauma-informed approaches in addressing family violence?
- What impact does economic empowerment have on the dynamics and prevalence of violence against women?
- How do feminists view current criminal justice policies and practices?
- How do conversations around domestic abuse take into account intersectionality?
- What challenges may women in different industries overcome to assume leadership roles?
- How does media consumption affect body image?
- How do gendered expectations influence appearance management behaviours in college/university settings?
- How are college campuses addressing rape culture through institutional responses?
- How do feminist views influence mental health and suicide prevention?
- How does feminism impact women’s roles and dynamics within families, considering potential negative effects?
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Trending Topics on Feminist Issues
- Examine how the internet has transformed Feminism into a public source of mockery and praise.
- Investigate the theoretical conflict between gender and sex.
- Investigate the history of the #MeToo movement and the feminist victim challenge.
- Examine the views of several feminists who are still devout Muslims on Female Genital Mutilation.
- To make the feminist message, emphasise the feminist technique and means.
- According to five works of literature or important feminists/anti-feminists of your choosing, how does Feminism establish, dismantle, and reconstruct gender roles?
- Examine how feminists deal with societal injustice and violence.
- Investigate the employability of feminist women in the United States.
- What is the feminist critic’s stance on worldwide gender inequality?
- How modern beauty standards continue to limit what and who is considered beautiful online and offline.
- How the concept of beauty is also a radical social and political prejudice that denies women some basic rights.
- Examine gender disparity and equality in American politics.
- Investigate gender imbalance and equality in the UK government.
- Consider if religion, Feminism, and liberal morality can be reconciled.
- Examine the difficulties women confront in the face of violence in nations such as India and Pakistan.
- Examine feminist psychology about Middle Eastern women.
- Analyse the changing feminist thought in the academic and in the actual world.
- How governments use Feminism as a tool for social mobilisation, resulting in the demise of their culture.
- Modern beauty standards continue to limit what and who is considered beautiful online and offline.
- The concept of beauty is also a radical social and political prejudice that denies women some basic rights.
Feminist Project Topics
- The contrast between the gender roles of women and the Feminist role in society
- Examining the benefits and drawbacks of identifying as a feminist
- Compare the benefits of being a feminist in rich and developing countries.
- Examine the future of Feminism in Taliban-controlled Afghanistan. Examine the motivating elements of Feminism throughout history
- Highlight and explain how Feminism has contributed to increased rape education.
- Feminism and government assistance: How government assistance may put an end to all vices against women
- The careful examination of equity and equality in Feminism
- The modern world’s perspective on Feminism has shifted: debate
- Investigate the lives, times, and biographies of any male feminist.
- Justify the role of Middle Eastern women in the struggle for gender equality.
- Examine any European government’s activities in promoting feminist principles.
- Examine any Southern American government’s role in preserving women’s rights.
- Investigate the relationship between Feminism and lesbianism.
- Examine the link between Feminism and the increase of single women in America.
- Determine the relevance of the emergence of liberal ideals over conservative beliefs in promoting Feminism.
- Discuss how women in the United States military are still subjected to discrimination, sexual assault, and brutality.
- Discuss the methods for eliminating sexual assault and discrimination in the military of two nations of your choice.
- Analyse the role of women in your preferred UK election.
- Investigate the issue of gender equality in modern Britain.
- Provide an outline of the British monarchy and the restoration of female kings.
- Rebuild the Women’s Trade Union League’s fundamental ideals and principles.
Research Topics On Feminism
- Give some instances of modern feminist manifestos and what they have contained in feminist thought.
- What is Feminism’s detrimental impact on teens, and how has it created hatred towards men?
- What is the public’s take on women’s influence over celebrities in the face of the law in the aftermath of R Kelly’s imprisonment?
- Speak with a self-identified feminist and discuss their views on Feminism.
- Discuss the contentious topics surrounding Feminism and provide solutions to unsolved problems.
- Examine Mona Eataly’s writings and compare her feminist beliefs to those of other black feminists.
- Investigate what bold Feminism entails.
- Should unisex restrooms be permitted in pubs, restaurants, and hotels in a world fraught with sexual violence?
- Examine the prejudices experienced by transgender women and how the feminist movement might be a sort of stereotyped freedom.
- Investigate the wide varieties of Feminism and how hairstyles can also be used to make political statements.
Feminist Topic Ideas for Discussion
- Is Feminism only a historical residue of a modern need?
- Is it possible for a female president to arise in America or the United Kingdom because Taiwan’s president is female?
- What are your opinions on female authorities serving in various roles worldwide?
- What do you think about the absence of female political representation?
- How does a lack of political representation for women influence women’s political participation?
- Could religion be claimed to be a contributing element to women’s current plight?
- The internet has been a driving factor in the pursuit of equality.
- The feminist movement is just a platform for women to gain more power.
- How have environmental and feminist issues influenced national policies?
- Have other movements swallowed Feminism?
Women Empowerment Topics
- What role does the shift from cash to digital payrolls have in empowering women in poor countries?
- Why is there such a disparity between corporate attempts to execute women’s empowerment?
- Initiatives and corporate commitments to furthering equality?
- Talk about what everyone can do to help women in their neighbourhood.
- Why is workplace health such an important issue for women’s empowerment?
- Examine the numerous advantages of women’s empowerment.
- How has the UAE’s feminist movement empowered Arab women?
- Women’s political representation, politics, and decision-making.
- Discuss the role of feminists in promoting women’s empowerment.
- Women’s empowerment in Asian countries has increased during the previous two decades.
Informative Feminism Dissertation Topics
- Is it feasible to distinguish the three major waves of Feminism while defining a cohesive philosophy?
- Why is the premise that ‘if you believe men and women are equal, you’re a feminist’ insufficient in the Feminist movement’s third wave?
- Can Feminism forge a coherent movement amid the shattered environment of 21st-century Feminist thought?
- An assessment of the third wave’s inadequacy as the final progression of Feminist thinking, as well as how the next wave will be characterised.
- What are the difficulties that Intersectional Feminism has in disentangling oppressive systems from one another, and how can the movement negotiate this complication?
- A feminist assessment of the relationship between police violence and patriarchal society.
- Where is the boundary between defending an oppressed ecology and imposing oppressive ideals?
- Investigating the relationship between authoritarian right anti-environmental and anti-feminist political thought.
- Priority or Privilege? A critical examination of the Ecofeminist movement’s inability to address class problems and the consequences for its efficacy.
- How does Feminist thought in emerging environments vary from Western Feminist philosophy?
- A critical examination of how Western Feminism fails to meet the issues of global women.
- Is it feasible for Western philosophy to accurately reflect women living in the aftermath of colonial domination in a postcolonial society?
- Is promoting gender equality in emerging countries a moral obligation or an imperialist endeavour?
- Investigate the gender difference in the pursuit of independence for any country.
- A critical examination of the role of identity politics in social justice movements in the twenty-first century.
It is possible to contribute to an ever-growing and complicated field of study by writing a dissertation or capstone on feminist philosophy and critique. In view of the complexity of the underlying issue of ‘Feminism’, there are a number of feminist dissertation topics to consider.
Please contact us immediately if you need assistance writing your feminist dissertation. Our writers have years of experience researching, writing, proofreading, and editing dissertations on the greatest feminist research topics. Upon receiving your specifications, we will provide you with a high-quality, plagiarism-free research paper on time and within your budget.
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How to find feminism dissertation topics.
To find dissertation topics on feminism:
- Study feminist literature and theories.
- Analyse gender-related gaps or issues.
- Explore intersectionality with race, class, etc.
- Investigate historical and contemporary perspectives.
- Consider media, politics, and arts for feminist angles.
- Choose a topic resonating with your passion and research goals.
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Reconsidering Feminism Since 1945 Through Encounter, Translation, and Resignification: Towards a Historical Narrative
- First Online: 19 September 2021
Cite this chapter
- Maud Anne Bracke 7 ,
- Julia C. Bullock 8 ,
- Penelope Morris 9 &
- Kristina Schulz 10
Part of the book series: Palgrave Studies in Language, Gender and Sexuality ((PSLGS))
836 Accesses
The opening chapter introduces the book’s key questions—namely, what shifts in meaning occur when a feminist text is translated linguistically and culturally, which agents act as translators of such texts, what strategies do they employ, how do processes of translation reframe visions of a fairer society and reinvent gender roles, and how can we historicise such processes for the second half of the twentieth century? The chapter starts by providing an original historical narrative of post-1945 global feminisms seen through the prism of transnational encounter, transfer, and resignification across languages and cultures. It offers an historical framework, which involves re-thinking the actors and periodisation of the existing, and recently thriving, scholarship on global feminisms. It reflects on the role played by transfer and translation in relation to war and de-colonisation, politicisation of sex and the body, and the dissemination of concepts such as gender and intersectionality. In the final section, the key concepts adopted in this book—politics of location and resignification—are introduced and situated in this historical narrative, and the key contributions of the book chapters are highlighted.
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Bracke, M.A., Bullock, J.C., Morris, P., Schulz, K. (2021). Reconsidering Feminism Since 1945 Through Encounter, Translation, and Resignification: Towards a Historical Narrative. In: Bracke, M.A., Bullock, J.C., Morris, P., Schulz, K. (eds) Translating Feminism. Palgrave Studies in Language, Gender and Sexuality. Palgrave Macmillan, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-79245-9_1
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5 Essays About Feminism
On the surface, the definition of feminism is simple. It’s the belief that women should be politically, socially, and economically equal to men. Over the years, the movement expanded from a focus on voting rights to worker rights, reproductive rights, gender roles, and beyond. Modern feminism is moving to a more inclusive and intersectional place. Here are five essays about feminism that tackle topics like trans activism, progress, and privilege:
“Trickle-Down Feminism” – Sarah Jaffe
Feminists celebrate successful women who have seemingly smashed through the glass ceiling, but the reality is that most women are still under it. Even in fast-growing fields where women dominate (retail sales, food service, etc), women make less money than men. In this essay from Dissent Magazine, author Sarah Jaffe argues that when the fastest-growing fields are low-wage, it isn’t a victory for women. At the same time, it does present an opportunity to change the way we value service work. It isn’t enough to focus only on “equal pay for equal work” as that argument mostly focuses on jobs where someone can negotiate their salary. This essay explores how feminism can’t succeed if only the concerns of the wealthiest, most privileged women are prioritized.
Sarah Jaffe writes about organizing, social movements, and the economy with publications like Dissent, the Nation, Jacobin, and others. She is the former labor editor at Alternet.
“What No One Else Will Tell You About Feminism” – Lindy West
Written in Lindy West’s distinct voice, this essay provides a clear, condensed history of feminism’s different “waves.” The first wave focused on the right to vote, which established women as equal citizens. In the second wave, after WWII, women began taking on issues that couldn’t be legally-challenged, like gender roles. As the third wave began, the scope of feminism began to encompass others besides middle-class white women. Women should be allowed to define their womanhood for themselves. West also points out that “waves” may not even exist since history is a continuum. She concludes the essay by declaring if you believe all people are equal, you are a feminist.
Jezebel reprinted this essay with permission from How To Be A Person, The Stranger’s Guide to College by Lindy West, Dan Savage, Christopher Frizelle, and Bethany Jean Clement. Lindy West is an activist, comedian, and writer who focuses on topics like feminism, pop culture, and fat acceptance.
“Toward a Trans* Feminism” – Jack Halberstam
The history of transactivsm and feminism is messy. This essay begins with the author’s personal experience with gender and terms like trans*, which Halberstam prefers. The asterisk serves to “open the meaning,” allowing people to choose their categorization as they see fit. The main body of the essay focuses on the less-known history of feminists and trans* folks. He references essays from the 1970s and other literature that help paint a more complete picture. In current times, the tension between radical feminism and trans* feminism remains, but changes that are good for trans* women are good for everyone.
This essay was adapted from Trans*: A Quick and Quirky Account of Gender Variability by Jack Halberstam. Halberstam is the Professor of American Studies and Ethnicity, Gender Studies and Comparative Literature at the University of Southern California. He is also the author of several books.
“Rebecca Solnit: How Change Happens” – Rebecca Solnit
The world is changing. Rebecca Solnit describes this transformation as an assembly of ideas, visions, values, essays, books, protests, and more. It has many layers involving race, class, gender, power, climate, justice, etc, as well as many voices. This has led to more clarity about injustice. Solnit describes watching the transformation and how progress and “ wokeness ” are part of a historical process. Progress is hard work. Not exclusively about feminism, this essay takes a more intersectional look at how progress as a whole occurs.
“How Change Happens” was adapted from the introduction to Whose Story Is it? Rebecca Solnit is a writer, activist, and historian. She’s the author of over 20 books on art, politics, feminism, and more.
“Bad Feminist” extract – Roxane Gay
People are complicated and imperfect. In this excerpt from her book Bad Feminist: Essays , Roxane Gay explores her contradictions. The opening sentence is, “I am failing as a woman.” She goes on to describe how she wants to be independent, but also to be taken care of. She wants to be strong and in charge, but she also wants to surrender sometimes. For a long time, she denied that she was human and flawed. However, the work it took to deny her humanness is harder than accepting who she is. While Gay might be a “bad feminist,” she is also deeply committed to issues that are important to feminism. This is a must-read essay for any feminists who worry that they aren’t perfect.
Roxane Gay is a professor, speaker, editor, writer, and social commentator. She is the author of Bad Feminist , a New York Times bestseller, Hunger (a memoir), and works of fiction.
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About the author, emmaline soken-huberty.
Emmaline Soken-Huberty is a freelance writer based in Portland, Oregon. She started to become interested in human rights while attending college, eventually getting a concentration in human rights and humanitarianism. LGBTQ+ rights, women’s rights, and climate change are of special concern to her. In her spare time, she can be found reading or enjoying Oregon’s natural beauty with her husband and dog.
334 Feminism Essay Topics & Examples
If you’re looking for original feminist topics to write about, you’re in luck! Our experts have collected this list of ideas for you to explore.
📝 Key Points to Use to Write an Outstanding Feminism Essay
🌟 top feminism title ideas, 🏆 best feminism essay topics & examples, 🥇 most interesting feminist topics to write about, 📌 creative feminist essay titles, ✅ simple & easy feminism essay titles, 🔍 interesting topics to write about feminism, 📑 good research topics about feminism, ❓ feminism questions for essay.
You may find yourself confused by various theories, movements, and even opinions when writing a feminism essay, regardless of your topic. Thus, producing an excellent paper becomes a matter of more than merely knowing your facts.
You should be able to explain difficult concepts while coincidentally touching upon fundamental points of feminist theory. Here are some starter examples of crucial essay-writing points, which can make your work better:
- Research and create a bibliography before beginning to write. There are various book and journal titles available both online and in libraries, and using them defines your essay’s credibility. You may use both books published long ago, such as “The Second Sex” by Simone de Beauvoir, and modern-day publications. Referencing reliable sources throughout your work will help you convince your readers that your approach is factual and in line with the main trends of the academic community.
- Writing a feminism essay outline beforehand will save you precious time. Not only because it is a tool to get your thoughts in order before beginning to write but also because it allows you to judge whether you have covered the subject thoroughly. Furthermore, structuring beforehand enables you to understand possible drawbacks of your previous research, which you can promptly correct.
- Explain the history behind your problem. Doing so allows you to set the scene for your essay and quickly introduce it to an audience, who may not be as well versed in feminism essay topics as you. Furthermore, you can use your historical introduction later as a prerequisite to explaining its possible future effects.
- Be aware of the correct terminology and use it appropriately. This action demonstrates a profound knowledge of your assigned issue to your readers. From women’s empowerment and discrimination to androcentrism and gynocriticism, track the terms you may need to implement throughout your work.
- Do not overlook your title as a tool to gain your readers’ attention. Your papers should interest people from the beginning and making them want to read more of your work. Writing good feminism essay titles is a great start to both catching their attention and explaining what your central theme is.
- Read available feminism essay examples to understand the dos and don’ts that will help you write your own paper. Plagiarism and inspiration are different concepts, and you can get great ideas from others’ work, so long as you do not copy them!
After you have done your research, drafted an outline, and read some sample works, you are ready to begin writing. When doing so, you should not avoid opposing opinions on topics regarding feminism, and use them to your advantage by refuting them.
Utilizing feminist criticism will allow you to sway even those with different perspectives to see some aspects worthy of contemplation within your essay. Furthermore, it is a mark of good academism, to be able to defend your points with well-rounded counterarguments!
Remember to remain respectful throughout your essay and only include trusted, credible information in your work. This action ensures that your work is purely academic, rather than dabbling in a tabloid-like approach.
While doing the latter may entertain your readers for longer, the former will help you build a better demonstration of your subject, furthering good academic practices and contributing to the existing body of literature.
Find more points and essays at IvyPanda!
- 21st Century Patriarchy.
- Third Wave Feminism.
- Men in the Movement.
- Gender Roles in Sports.
- Femininity in Media.
- The History of Feminist Slogans.
- Must-Read Feminist Books.
- Feminist Perspective in Politics.
- Gender Equality in Patriarchal Society.
- Feminism & Contemporary Art.
- Feminism in “A Doll’s House” by Henrik Ibsen Nora is referred by her husband as a songbird, a lark, a squirrel, names that suggest how insignificant she is to her.
- Feminism: Benefits over Disadvantages They believe that feminists make the importance of family less critical than it used to be, which affects children’s lives and their psychological state.
- Feminist Perspective: “My Last Duchess”, “To His Coy Mistress”, and “The Secretary Chant” He thinks such behavior is offensive to his position and his power, this is why this woman is in the past, and the other one is waiting for him downstairs to enlarge Duke’s collection of […]
- Feminism in Frankenstein by Mary Shelley Mary Wollstonecraft expressly makes her stand known in advocating for the rights of the women in her novel, A Vindication of the Rights of Woman, but her daughter is a bit reluctant to curve a […]
- Third-World Feminism Analysis Although the primary aim of western feminists is centered on the issues women face, the beliefs of the third world consist of various tenets compared to western feminist interpretations.
- Feminist Approach to Health In general feminist recognize gender as an important aspect and believe that gender inequality essentially exist.
- Feminism in Advertisements of the 1950s and Today In the paper, the author discussed how the whole process of advertising and feminism is depicted in print advertisements. The common characteristic is the advertisements’ illustration of feminism in the media.
- Feminist Criticism in Literature: Character of Women in Books Wright The unimportance of women in the play is a critical factor for the women should follow all the things that their men counterparts impose on them.
- Top Themes About Feminism It’s a movement that is mainly concerned with fighting for women’s rights in terms of gender equality and equity in the distribution of resources and opportunities in society.
- “We Should All Be Feminists” Adichie’s TED Talk For Adichie, the only thing necessary to qualify as a feminist is recognizing the problem with gender and aspiring to fix it, regardless of whether a person in question is a man or woman. This […]
- The Great Gatsby: Analysis and Feminist Critique The feminist critique is an aspect that seeks to explore the topic of men domination in the social, economic, and political sectors.
- Hedda Gabler: Feminist Ideas and Themes Central to the female world was the woman with knowledge.”Think of the sort of life she was accustomed to in her father’s time.
- Female Characters in Shakespeare’s “Othello”: A Feminist Critique This shows that Desdemona has completely accepted and respected her role as a woman in the society; she is an obedient wife to Othello.
- Character Analysis in Pride and Prejudice From the Feminist Perspective Darcy is a character who is able to evolve over the span of the story, and eventually, he recognizes his mistakes.Mr.
- Feminism in “The Handmaid’s Tale” by Margaret Atwood Religion in Gilead is the similar to that of the current American society especially, the aspect of ambiguity which has been predominant with regard to the rightful application of religious beliefs and principles.
- Gender Issues: Education and Feminism These experiences in many times strongly affects the individual’s understanding, reasoning, action about the particular issue in contention In this work two issues of great influence and relevance to our societies are discussed.
- Feminism in “Heart of Darkness” and “Apocalypse Now” However, one realizes that she is voiceless in the novel, which highlights the insignificance of role of women in Heart of Darkness.
- Metropolis’ Women: Analysis of the Movie’s Feminism & Examples This film is an endeavor to examine the image of the female depicted, the oppression that they have to endure before they are liberated, as well as the expectations of men with regard to the […]
- A Feminist Reading of “Wild Nights” and “Death Be Not Proud” From the feminist perspective, the key feature of the speaker’s stance in “Death Be Not Proud” that sets it apart from “Wild Nights” is the speaker’s persona, which is openly and unequivocally male.
- Feminism in “The Introduction” and “A Nocturnal Reverie” by Finch One of Anne Finch’s poems, “The Introduction,” talks about female writers of her time in the first twenty lines of her text.
- Feminism and Respect for Culture A crucial gender aspect that continues to trouble the unity of the people across the world is gender bias, which seems to encourage the formation of the feminist campaigns.
- Feminist Therapy: Gwen’s Case Study The application of a feminist perspective in Gwen’s case is different from other theoretical frameworks as the approach highlights the impact of gender and associated stressors on the client’s life.
- Feminism in the “The Bell Jar” by Sylvia Plath This piece of writing reveals the concept of gender in general and “the role of female protagonists in a largely patriarchal world” in particular. In Plath’s novel, the bell jar is a metaphor used to […]
- Yves Klein’s Works From a Feminist Perspective The images were painted in the 20th century in the backdrop of the rising pressure in many parts of the globe for the government to embrace gender equality.
- Feminism: Reflection of Cultural Feminism If they found that the gases were harmful and may lead to complications in their body, they would approve the employer’s right to prohibit women from working in the company.
- Mary Rowlandson’s Feminism and View on Women’s Role The sort of power developed by Rowlandson was such that it set her apart from the traditional roles of the Puritan women in her time and within her culture.
- Feminist Approach in Literary Criticism The reason for this is simple this particular plot’s development suggests that, just as it happened to be the case with the functioning of a male psyche, the working of a female psyche implies that […]
- Feminist Theory of Delinquency by Chesney-Lind One of the core ideas expressed by Chesney-Lind is that girls are highly susceptible to abuse and violent treatment. At the same time, scholars note that girls do not view delinquency as the “rejection of […]
- Feminist Connotations in Susan Glaspell’s “Trifles” It is a call to reexamine the value of women in a patriarchal society; through their central role in the drama, the female characters challenge traditional notions about women’s perspective and value.
- “Daddy-long-Legs”: Why Jerusha Is a Feminist Heroine Jerusha is a feminist because she uses the letters to communicate the inequalities she feels in her relationship with Daddy-long-legs and her limits.
- Race, Class and Gender: Feminism – A Transformational Politic The social construction of difference in America has its historical roots in the days of slavery, the civil war, the civil rights movement, and the various shades of affirmative action that have still not managed […]
- The Concept of Feminist Epistemology The analysis starts with an overview of the evolutions process of standpoint epistemology; then, the philosophical movement is defined and the major ideas and arguments embedded into the theory are discussed.
- Willa Cather and Feminism Ability to work and/or supervise oneself as a woman is also quietly depicted through the girl who is able to work in the absence of her father. Cather depicts most of the women in her […]
- Hello Kitty as a Kitsch and Anti-Feminist Phenomenon In this scenario, Hello Kitty is linked to the notion of kitsch because it connects adult men and women that are attached to the cute image to constant consumerism.
- The Picture of Arabic Feminist Najir’s father’s taking of her sexually excludes her from chances at a marriage of her own, because she is deprived of her virginity, and exposes the young woman to the risk of a pregnancy which […]
- The Incorporation of Feminism in Literature By focusing on the character, the book portrays the demand for feminism in society to allow females to have the ability and potential to undertake some responsibilities persevered by their male counterparts. The belief in […]
- Feminist Perspective in “Ruined” Play by Nottage This is a story about the issues of women in the Democratic Republic of Congo during the civil war. The comments of ‘Anonymous’ published as a response to the review of Jill Dolan, demonstrate the […]
- Importance of Feminism in Interpersonal Communication in “Erin Brockovich” In this presentation, the theme of feminism in interpersonal communication will be discussed to prove that it is a good example of how a woman can fight for her rights.
- Maya Angelou and Audre Lorde: The Black Feminist Poets The themes of double discrimination are developed in the poems “Woman Work” and “Still I Rise” by Maya Angelou and poems “A Meeting of Minds” and “To the Poet Who Happens to Be Black and […]
- Feminism in Canadian Literature First of all, the female author of the article considered by Cosh is evidently a supporter of the equality of rights for men and women, and her account on the women liberation movement in the […]
- Feminist Approach: Virginia Woolf In “A room of ones own” Virginia Woolf speaks about the problems of women, gender roles, and the low social position of women writers in society.
- Feminist Ethics Concept This point of view therefore leaves the patriarchal society as the only repairable institution and this is where radical feminist concurs with the fact that feminist ethics are centered on changing the social perceptions of […]
- The Myntra Logo from a Feminist Perspective The first feature of the Myntra logo that comes under the scrutiny of transnational feminism is the commercialization of female sexuality.
- Historical Development of Feminism and Patriarchy Women in the United States have always encountered challenges that interfere with their individual fulfillment in society.
- Feminist View of Red Riding Hood Adaptations The Brothers Grimm modified the ending of the story, in their version the girl and her grandmother were saved by a hunter who came to the house when he heard the wolf snoring.
- Feminism in ‘Trifles’ by Susan Glaspell The Feminist Movement, also called the Women’s Movement and the Women’s Liberation Movement, includes a series of efforts by women in the world to fight for the restoration of gender equality.
- Wendy McElroy: A Feminist Defense of Men’s Rights The author sees the recent violation of men’s rights in the excessive spread of gender feminism, which appeared in the 1960s and touched primarily the family aspects of woman’s life, in particular, the right to […]
- Feminism and Sexuality in the “Lila Says” Film She seems to be opposing the system and traditions, but instead, she is a product of the existing values and norms.
- Concept of “Western Feminism” It is implied that western feminism neglects to take into consideration that other types of feminism exist and that applying the cultural norms and behaviors that formed the ideals of western feminism is just inappropriate […]
- Feminism in the Story “Lord of the Rings” The movie, in its turn, instead of focusing on the evolution of the female leads, seemed to be concerned with the relationships between the male characters as well as the growth of the latter.
- Judith Butler’s Feminist Theory From a phenomenological point of view, gender is a stable identity that is realized through the repetition of certain acts. Butler’s article is dedicated to the role of gender, its relation to a body and […]
- The Adoption of Structuralism and Post-Structuralism Basics in Feminist Cultural Theory On the contrary, post structuralism is opposite to such an assumption and uses the concept of deconstruction in order to explain the relations and the position of women in the society.
- Feminism in The Yellow Wallpaper In an attempt to free her, she rips apart the wallpaper and locks herself in the bedroom. The husband locks her wife in a room because of his beliefs that she needed a rest break.
- The Feminist Theory in Nursing Since nursing has traditionally been a women’s profession, it is important to understand the oppression of women to gain insight into some of the most pressing issues in nursing.
- Feminist Critique of Jean Racine’s “Phedre” Racine view Phedre as in a trap by the anger of gods and her destiny due to the unlawful and jealous passion that resulted into the deaths of Hippolytus and Oenone.
- Gender and Religion: Women and Islam Part of this worship is the realization that Islam is a way of life and the actions of each believer contribute to the creation of a God-fearing society.
- Feminism in Roger and Dodger Film The plot of the movie tends towards portraying women as inferior to men given majority of the women in the movie fall into traps set by men very easily.
- Comparing Mainardi and Kollantai on Housework and Women’s Oppression Mainardi and Kollantai argue that women should be liberated from chores for the sake of the future. Nonetheless, the two feminists have different views on the way liberation can be achieved.
- Bell Hooks’ Article Analysis With Regard to Women and Minorities Feminism is meant to stop sexist oppression. The major aim of these movements has not yet been achieved. Bell Hooks promotes the knowledge of feminist theory as essential portion of the development of self-actualization.
- Equal Society: Antebellum Feminism, Temperance, and Abolition It is characterized by the emergence of a women’s rights movement that was spearheaded by activists who sought to secure the rights of women to vote, own property, and participate in education and the public […]
- Feminism in the “Lorraine Hansberry” Film Her activism aligns with the fundamental tenets of women of color feminism, which emphasizes the intersecting nature of oppression and the importance of centering the experiences of marginalized groups in social justice movements.
- Gloria Steinem: Political Activist and Feminist Leader Thesis: Gloria Steinem’s direct, bold, argumentative, and explicit style of conveying her ideas and values is the result of her political activism, feminist leadership, and her grandmother, Pauline Perlmutter Steinem.
- Feminist Geography and Women Suppression Tim Cresswell’s feminist geography explores how the patriarchal structures of our society have silenced women’s voices and experiences in the field of geography for centuries and how recent changes in the field have allowed for […]
- Feminism from a Historical Perspective Accordingly, the discontent facilitated the development of reform-minded activist organizations across Europe and the United States and the subsequent rise of the Modern or New Women’s Movement.
- “Othello” Through the Lens of Feminist Theory It depicts female characters in a state of submission and obedience and shows the disbalance in the distribution of power between men and women.
- The Feminist Theory in Modern Realities The theory and culture of feminism in modern philosophy and the development of society play a significant role in cultural and social development.
- Feminist Accountability Approach Therefore, the feminist accountability approach involves the collective responsibility to fight social injustices regardless of gender and race. Therefore, integrating the global approach to social injustice promotes the aspect of universality and unity in promoting […]
- Alice Walker’s Statement “Womanist Is to Feminist…” In her short tale “Perspectives Past and Present,” author and poet Alice Walker famously uses the statement “Womanist Is to Feminist as Purple Is to Lavender,” meaning that womanist is a larger ideological framework within […]
- Feminist Perspective on Family Counselling The author of the article considers the study and the data obtained as a result of it as information reporting not only about the specifics of homosexual relationships but also about their perception in American […]
- The Feminist and Gender Theory Influence on Nursing That is, gender and feminist theories are still relevant in the modern world. This is explained by the fact that women are struggling to demonstrate their professionalism in order to receive the same recognition and […]
- Modern Feminism and Its Major Directions Radical feminism views patriarchy as the reason men have more rights than women and attempts to fight against it. Liberal, intersectional, and radical feminism differ in many ways as they have various perspectives on women’s […]
- Feminist Theory and Its Application Alice Walker advocated for the rights of women of color at the end of the 20th century, creating a feminist branch named womanism. The feminist theory is one of the most known and popular theories […]
- Discussion of Feminist Movements The feminist movements have been behind a sequence of political and social movements that champion the equal rights of women in all aspects of life.
- Feminists on the Women’s Role in the Bible The author of the article uses the term intertextuality, which plays a significant role in the text analysis, including from the feminist aspect.
- Feminist Contribution to International Relations Moreover, it will be shown that the concept of gender is important as it helps to shed light on the power dynamics in the sphere of international relations and explain female exclusion from politics.
- Emotional Revival in Feminist Writers’ Short Stories This paper aims to discuss the emotional revival of heroines in the short stories of Kate Chopin and Charlotte Perkins Gilman.”The Story of an Hour” is a very short story that describes a woman’s experience […]
- Emotion and Freedom in 20th-Century Feminist Literature The author notes that the second layer of the story can be found in the antagonism between the “narrator, author, and the unreliable protagonist”.
- The Cyborg Term in the Context of Feminist Studies In other words, during the transition of identity from the individual to the collective level, people, especially women, may encounter inequalities manifested in the collective space.
- Feminism: A Road Map to Overcoming COVID-19 and Climate Change By exposing how individuals relate to one another as humans, institutions, and organizations, feminism aids in the identification of these frequent dimensions of suffering.
- White Privilege in Conflict and Feminist Theories They see how the privilege of whiteness and denial of non-whiteness are connected to the social and political meaning of race and ethnicity.
- Women’s Role in Society From Feminist Perspective Also, in Hartsock’s opinion, that the whole society would benefit if women were allowed to have a role equal with men in a community.
- The Feminist Theory and IR Practice Focusing on how international relations theorists explained some concepts, such as security, state, and superiority that led to gender bias, feminists felt the need to develop and transform the international relations practice and theory.
- Intersectionality and Feminist Activism Therefore, I hope to study the academic literature to discuss the existing tendencies and difficulties to contribute to the understanding of the identified topic in terms of gender and female studies.
- Feminist Theoretical Perspectives on Rape There is a number of theoretical perspectives aimed at explaining what stands behind rape, that is, how rape is reinforced by, why it is more widespread in specific concepts, and what a rapist’s motivations for […]
- Feminist Film Theory Overview The presence of women on the screen is commonly accomplished by the sexualization and objectivization of female characters. Along with that, sadism and fetishism toward the physical beauty of the object and the representation of […]
- Homosexuality and Feminism in the TV Series The depiction of these complex topics in the TV series of the humoristic genre implies both regressive and progressive impulses for the audience.
- Popular Feminism in Video Post of Emma Watson According to Emma Watson, now feminism is increasingly associated with hatred of men, although in reality it only implies the belief that men and women should have equal rights and opportunities.
- Contingent Foundations: Feminism and Postmodernism Feminism offers women theoretical bases on which to interrogate the issues of womanhood while Postmodernism takes this away by arguing for the “death of subjects”.abolition of the foundations of the ideals of reality.
- The Feminist Theory, Prostitution, and Universal Access to Justice In the essay, it is concluded that the theory is a key component of the reforms needed in the criminal justice system with respect to prostitution. In this essay, the subject of prostitution is discussed […]
- A Feminist Life Lesson in “Sula” by Toni Morrison This essay is going to review gender and love and sexuality as the key themes that intertwined with Nel and Sula’s friendship, while also explaining how these influenced each of the two main characters. On […]
- Art, Pornography and Feminism and Internet Influence The purpose of pornography is not the desire to admire the human body and respect physical intimacy. Indeed, society can say that women themselves agree to such rules, but the choice of a minority forms […]
- The Contemporary Image of Feminism Following the initial surge of the movement, governments finally came to acknowledge the magnitude of the situation and satisfied the demands of the female population.
- Feminism and Nationalism: The Western World In this case, we find that feminism has been a different that all the time and therefore, it is impossible to predict the trend of feminism in future.
- Gould’s and Sterling’s Feminist Articles Critique The focal point of this paper is to prepare a critical reflection on the articles by Stephen Jay Gould named “Women’s Brains” in The Panda’s Thumb and by Anne Fausto-Sterling named “The biological Connections,” from […]
- Core Aspects of Black Feminist and Womanist Thoughts Compared to Jones, who believes in “unparalleled advocates of universal suffrage in its true sense,” Lindsey does not support the relegation of the “voices and experiences of women of color to the background”.
- Barbara and Beverly Smith: Black Feminist Statement Sexism was an explicit element of the African American Civil Rights Movement. Fight against segregation was rather single-sided.
- Feminist Contributions to Understanding Women’s Lives This gave women a clear picture of the daily realities in their lives. The success of feminism is evident at all levels of human interaction since there is a better understanding of women and their […]
- As We Are Feminist Campaign’s Strategic Goals The present paper is devoted to the analysis of the goals of a feminist campaign As We Are that is aimed at challenging gender stereotypes that are being promoted by the media and society in […]
- Feminist Ethics in Nursing: Personal Thoughts The concept of feminist ethics emphasizes the belief that ethical theorizing at the present is done from a distinctly male point of view and, as such, lacks the moral experience of women.
- Feminism: Kneel to the Rest of Life, or Fight for the Fairness It seems that the law is not perfect, and the public opinion of sexual harassment might influence a woman’s life negatively.
- Feminist Perspective Influence on Canadian Laws and Lawmakers The change in the statistics is attributed to social changes, which include increase of women in the labor force, conflict in female-male relations, increase in alcohol consumption and increase in the rate of divorce. Feminists […]
- Blog Post: Arab Feminism in Contemporary World Women of the Arab world have struggled to overcome inequality, oppression, and rights deprivation by state authorities, which takes the discussion of the Islamic feminist movement to the political domain. According to Sharia, the unity […]
- Feminist Movement and Recommendations on Women’s Liberation According to Nawal El-Saadawi In Egypt, the feminist movement was started by Nawal El-Saadawi, and her article “The Arab Women’s Solidarity Association: The Coming Challenge” has historical importance as it addresses the plight of women in the community.
- Technological Progress, Globalization, Feminism Roots However, the work becomes more complicated when the time distance of the events and processes is shorter, and the stories are unfinished.
- Race at the Intersections: Sociology, 3rd Wave Feminism, and Critical Race Theory In this reading, the author examines the phenomenon of racism not merely as an issue but a systematic, institutionalized, and cultural phenomenon that is hard to eliminate.
- The Feminist Performers: Yoko Ono, Marina Abramovic, Gina Pane The feminist artists ccontributed to the women’s image, its role in society, and exposed the passiveness and submissiveness the women are obliged to endure.
- Feminism and Multiculturalism for Women The foundation of liberalism is having an interest in all the minority cultures that are put together to form the larger special group.
- Feminist Analysis of Gender in American Television The analysis is guided by the hypothesis that the media plays a role in the propagation of antagonistic sexual and gender-based stereotypes.
- “The Great Gatsby” by Fitzgerald: Betrayal, Romance, Social Politics and Feminism This work seeks to outline the role of women in the development of the plot of the book and in relation to the social issues affecting women in contemporary society.
- Pornography’s Harm as a Feminist Fallacy In this scenario, scientific research has proven the argument not to be true. It is weakened by the fact that people are not forced to watch the video.
- Feminism in Mourning Dove’s “Cogewea, the Half-Blood” The patriarchal practices embraced by the Indian community and the subsequent system of governance humiliated the writer; hence, the use of Cogewea in the passage was aimed to imply the abilities that were bestowed upon […]
- Feminist Film Strategy: The Watermelon Women These techniques have the capabilities of shifting meaning away from the narrative as the source of meaning to the audience’s background knowledge in making meaning.
- The Emerging Feminism in India and Their Views on God as a Feminist However, among the explanation of the cause of the phenomenon for this lack of agreement is the tendency for people to define religion too narrowly, and in most cases from the perspective of their own […]
- Feminist Psychology in Canada The introduction of the article gives the purposes of the research that include the historical and present condition of the psychology of women field of interest.
- American Art Since 1945 Till Feminism The entire movement represented the combination of emotional strength and the self-expression of the European abstract schools: Futurism, the Bauhaus and Synthetic Cubism.
- Modernist Art: A Feminist Perspective Clarke limited the definition of modernism even further by his restriction of it to the facets of the Paris of Manet and the Impressionists, a place of leisure, pleasure, and excesses, and it seems that […]
- Enlightenment, Feminism and Social Movements As a result of Enlightenment, the creative entrepreneurs as well as thinkers enjoyed the high freedom benefits that were brought in by the Enlightenment thinkers, enabling them to apply the newly acquired liberty to invent […]
- Feminism in ‘Telephone Video’ To demonstrate how feminist theory in communication is relevant to music, the paper will analyze the depiction of females, the vocal arrangements, representation of female roles and their visual appearance in Lady Gaga’s “Telephone” music […]
- The Feminist Art Movement in the 1970s and Today The feminist art movement emerged in the 1960s and from that time the women had taken much interest in what causes them to be different from the male gender and particularly, what causes the art […]
- Understanding of Feminism: Philosophical and Social Concepts The vision that emerges, in the narrative as in the world it represents, is of a whole composed of separate, yet interdependent and interrelating, parts.
- Geoffrey Chaucer: A Founder of English Literature as a Feminist Despite the distorted interpretation of gender in the patriarchal society, Chaucer’s vision of women contradicts the orthodox view of the biological distinction of males and females as the justification for gender inequality.
- Feminist Theory in Psychotherapy This theory puts women at the first place, and this place is reflected in three aspects: the first is its main object of study – the situation and difficulties faced by women in society, and […]
- Perils and Possibilities of Doing Transnational Feminist Activism These have promoted awareness of human rights among women and other masses, ensured and led to the adoption of the rules and regulations recognizing women rights and that supports ending of women violations and participated […]
- The Feminist Gendering Into International Relations These are early female contributions to IR academic and the In terms of conferences, the theme of gender and politics was being explored in conferences.
- “Feminism and Religion: The Introduction” by R. Gross Gross critically in order to see the essence of the book and the competence of the author in the current issue.
- Feminism – Women and Work in the Middle East The history of feminism consists of different movements and theories for the rights of women. The first wave of this phenomenon began in the 19th century and saw the end only in the early 20th […]
- Harriet Martineau, Charlotte Perkins Gilman, and Marianne Weber: Feminist Sociologists Through her writings she always advocated for the equal rights of women with men and remarked the importance of financial self-sufficiency among women in the society. She observed the role of women in society and […]
- Feminist Theory and Postmodern Approaches It seems to me that such technique can be quite helpful because it helps to get to the root of the problem.
- English Language in the Feminist Movement In addition to that, it is of the crucial importance to explore the underlying causes of this phenomenon. Now that we have enumerated the research methods, that can be employed, it is of the utmost […]
- Feminist Ideas in Mary Shelley’s “Frankenstein” One of these issues and the subject of this paper is the theme of feminism in Shelley’s novel. It is time to separate unchangeable morals from local manners”.- Mary Wollstonecraft in A Vindication of the […]
- Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni’s Works and Feminism The woman’s role is depicted ever so poignantly in the works of Divakaruni and this also reflects the importance of reclaiming the understanding of the role of women in society.
- Black Feminism: A Revolutionary Practice The Black Feminist Movement was organized in an endeavor to meet the requirements of black women who were racially browbeaten in the Women’s Movement and sexually exploited during the Black Liberation Movement.
- Popular Culture From the Fifties to Heroin Chic: Feminism The women have become aware of their legal rights and disabilities as a consequence of the inclusion of educated women in movements to repair the legal disabilities.
- Positive Changes That Feminism Brought to America And when, in 1919, the American Constitution was amended such that the women in all the States were given the right to vote, it was then that the first period of feminism officially ended, their […]
- Are Feminist Criticisms of Militarism Essentialist? In the following essay, I will trace the essentialist feminists and their juxtaposition to the extent of their deep thoughts and activities toward the militaristic attitude and the changing perception of women in the militarism […]
- Western Feminist Critics and Cultural Imperialism To be able to fulfill the above-provided task, it would be necessary to discuss and analyze the issues of race, gender, sexuality, the oppression of multiculturalism, cultural relativism, the attitude of the feminists toward the […]
- Social Justice and Feminism in America So as to make a change in this situation, the feminists in America took efforts to improve the condition of women.
- American Women in History: Feminism and Suffrage It is important to note that the key sharp issues discussed in this chapter are: a finding of the independent women suffrage movement, the role of the constituency in this process, the role of war […]
- Feminist Movements in Contemporary Times The artists are the intellectual leaders of a society who incur significant influence in the patterns of culture and civilization. The participation of women in the development of cultural values and literary achievements are also […]
- Feminist Critiques of Medicine In the area of new reproductive technologies, for instance, some women have campaigned to end the use of techniques such as IVF, seeing them as potentially genocidal and of no value to women.
- Shakespeare: A Feminist Writer A careful analysis of Lady Macbeth’s intensely complicated character and her role in the play proves that Shakespeare is actually a feminist writer.
- Kate Chopin’s Feminist Short Stories and Novels Two short stories were written by Chopin, A Story of One Hour and The Storm well as her brilliant novel Awakening should be regarded as one of the best examples of the feminist literature of […]
- Feminism in Ibsen’s Hedda Gabler Hedda Gabler, upon the discovery that her imaginary world of free-living and noble dying lies in shivers about her, no longer has the vitality to continue existence in the real world and chooses self-annihilation. At […]
- Liberal Feminism Movement Analysis The outcome of eradicating the concept of a patriarchy can only result in the liberation of women, gays, minorities and men as well.
- Feminism and Support of Gender Equality Nowadays, it involves advocacy and a set of activities aimed to protect the rights of a plethora of discriminated groups, including LGBT community members and racial minorities.
- Feminism: Liberal, Black, Radical, and Lesbian 2 In the 1960s and the 1970s, liberal feminism focused on working women’s issues and the impact of experiences that females of any race could have.
- Women and Law. Feminist Majority Foundation The paper describes the group’s history, principles, mission, methods of work, political activities, achievements, and opposition to emphasize the importance of the organization’s activity. As the ideology and movement that established the equality of men […]
- Empowerment and Feminist Theory Therefore, it can be concluded that the song “Unstoppable,” which is performed by Sia, transfers the main ideas of empowerment and feminist theory.
- A Feminist Analysis on Abu Ghraib Moreover, these tortures were intended to become public with the help of demonstrations at Abu Ghraib and taking photographs that accentuated the loss of prisoners’ masculine power.[4] According to Foucault’s views, public torture is an […]
- “The Historical Evolution of Black Feminist Theory and Praxis” by Taylor 1 The main points made by the author are reflected in the analysis of the four major topics in the creation of Black feminist thought and the discussion of two feminism waves in the US.
- Feminist Theory: Performing and Altering Bodies The introductory chapter points out that the body is a unifying subject that attracts intense inquiry to reveal different possibilities of corporeality that were masked by the intellectual traditions of modernism.
- Feminist Theories by Bordo, Shaw & Lee, Shildrick & Price The prolific feminist writers whose ideas and positions on the body will be compared are Susan Bordo, Shaw and Lee, and Shildrick and Price.
- Colonialism and Knowledge in Feminist Discourse Power imbalances affect human societies in multiple ways, and one of the phenomena that are important from this perspective is the intersection of colonialism and knowledge. From the perspective of colonization, the intersection of colonialism […]
- Feminism and the Relational Approach to Autonomy The relational approach to autonomy is a crucial aspect in the process of analyzing people’s behaviors and relations. Understanding the peculiarities of agency and autonomy is necessary to build ethical connections and avoid harming others.
- Ecological Feminism and Environmental Ethics Because of the effects that the process of globalization has had on the environment, including the increase in the speed of global warming and the scope of its outcomes, environmental ethics has gained significance.
- Feminist Perspective: “The Gender Pay Gap Explained” Another issue that needs to be discussed is that it is suggested that the elimination of the wage gap would help to enhance the economy and living conditions of many families.
- Second Wave of Feminist Movement The reason why the movement emerged in the 1960s was that females began to reconsider their position in the society that was established after the war.
- Spiritual and Educational Feminist Comparison The first use of the phrase is traced back in the fiscal 1871 and it was incorporated in the French medical texts to undermine the people who had both sex organs.
- Feminism: “The Second Sex” by Simone de Beauvoir According to post-structural feminism structures in society still hold the woman back.de Beauvoir states that this is because structures still exist in the minds of people as to the place of women in society.
- The Application of Psychoanalysis in Feminist Theories The concepts of psychoanalytic theories have become effective tools for understanding the main underpinnings of the feminist movement, its place in the lives of individual women, and post-feminism symptoms.
- Feminist Psychoanalysis From McRobbie’s Perspective
- Ageism and Feminism in Career and Family Expectations
- Feminist Theory in “A Family Thing” Movie
- Feminist Theory of Family Therapy
- Feminism in Tunisia and Jordan in Comparison
- Feminism and Gender Studies in Science
- Feminism in the United Arab Emirates
- Feminist Political Theory, Approaches and Challenge
- Feminism in the Past and Nowadays
- Feminism in Latin America
- Planet B-Girl: Community Building and Feminism in Hip-Hop
- “Feminism and Modern Friendship” by Marilyn Friedman
- Methods of Feminism Education and Its Modern Theories
- Feminism in Lorrie Moore’s “You’re Ugly, Too”
- Anti-Feminism and Heteropatriarchal Normativity
- The Theory of Feminism Through the Prism of Time
- Elena Poniatowska and Her Feminism
- Feminism in Laura Esquivel’s “Like Water for Chocolate”
- Prison and Social Movement in Black Feminist View
- Great Awakening, American Civil War, and Feminism
- Feminism and Roles in “A Raisin in the Sun” Play
- Feminist Miss America Pageant Protest of 1968
- Black Feminist Perspectives in Toni Morrison’s Works
- Feminist Movement as an Attempt to Obtain Equal Rights
- Axel Honneth Views on Feminism
- Feminist Deceit in Short Stories
- Post-Feminism in the Wonder Bra Commercial
- Feminist Movement Influence on the Arab Film Industry
- Third World Feminism and Its Challenges
- “First Wave” Feminist Movement
- Feminism: the Contraception Movement in Canada
- Beyonce and Assata Shakur Feminism Ideas Comparison
- Feminism in “‘Now We Can Begin” by Crystal Eastman
- Gender Studies of Feminism: Radical and Liberal Branches
- Feminism and Film Theory
- The Realization of Third-wave Feminism Ideals
- Sexuality as a Social and Historical Construct
- Modern Feminist Movements
- Feminist Theories in Relation to Family Functions
- Rebecca Solnit’s Views on Feminism
- “Frida Kahlo: A Contemporary Feminist Reading” by Liza Bakewell
- Chinese Feminism in the Early 20th Century
- Feminism in the 20th Century: a Literature Perspective. Research Summaries
- Shifting the Centre: Race, Class, and Feminist Theorizing About Motherhood
- Feminism and Modern Friendship
- Historical Development of Feminism and Patriarchy
- Women and Their Acceptance of Feminism
- Women, Religion, and Feminism
- Women’s Health and Feminism Theory
- The History of the Pill and Feminism
- Feminism is for Everybody: Passionate Politics
- Challenges to Build Feminist Movement Against Problems of Globalization and Neoliberalism
- Feministic Movement in Iron Jawed Angels
- Hillary Clinton: Furthering Political Agenda Through Feminism
- Feminist Pro-Porn During Sex Wars
- Feministic View of McCullers’ “The Member of the Wedding”
- “Feminism, Peace, Human Rights and Human Security” by Charlotte Bunch
- Feminism in China During the Late Twentieth Century
- Feminist Political Change
- Antonio Gramsci and Feminism: The Elusive Nature of Power
- Changes That Feminism and Gender Lenses Can Bring To Global Politics
- Feminist Research Methods
- The Fraternal Social Contract on Feminism and Community Formation
- Feminism Has Nothing to Tell Us About the Reality of War, Conflict and Hard, Cold Facts
- Feminism in the works of Susan Glaspell and Sophocles
- Cross Cultural Analysis of Feminism in the Muslim Community
- The Adoption of Feminist Doctrine in Canada
- Feminist Movement in Canada
- Feminism and Gender Mainstreaming
- Feminist Movement: The National Organization for Women
- Female Chauvinist Pigs: Raunch Culture and Feminism
- Feminist Analysis of the Popular Media: The Sexualization Process Takes Its Toll on the Younger Female Audience
- Seven Variations of Cinderella as the Portrayal of an Anti-Feminist Character: a Counterargument Against the Statement of Cinderella’s Passiveness
- Women in the Field of Art
- The Reflection of the Second-Wave Feminism in Scandinavia: “Show Me Love” and “Together”
- Liberal and Socialist Feminist Theories
- Gender Issue and the Feminist Movement
- Dorothy E. Smith and Feminist Theory Development
- Feminism Builds up in Romanticism, Realism, Modernism
- Feminist Movement Tendencies
- Feminist Literature: “The Revolt of Mother” by Mary E. Wilkins
- Scholars Comment on Gender Equality
- The Smurfette Principle in the Modern Media: Feminism Is over?
- Feminist Challenge to Mainstream International Relations Theory
- The Feminist Movement
- Feminism and Evolution or Emergence of Psychology
- Reasons Why the Black Women Population Did Not Consider Themselves a Part of the Ongoing Feminist Movements
- Black Women and the Feminist Movement
- Feminism and Patriarchy
- Feminism Interview and the Major Aim of Feminism
- World Politics: Realist, Liberals, and Feminists Theories
- Charlotte Gilman’s feminism theory
- Concept and History of the Liberal Feminism
- Feminism and Women’s History
- Feminist Criticism in “The Story of an Hour” and “The Yellow Wallpaper”
- Obesity: Health or Feminist Issue?
- Comparing Views on the Feminism of Wollstonecraft and Martin Luther King
- Anarchy, Black Nationalism and Feminism
- Concepts of Feminism in the Present Societies
- Gender Issues and Feminist Movement
- “Just Say No? The Use of Conversation Analysis in Developing a Feminist Perspective on Sexual Refusal” by Kitzinger and Frith: Summary
- How Did African Feminism Change the World?
- Why Might Feminism and Poststructuralism Be Described as an Uneasy Alliance?
- Does Feminism and Masculinity Define Who People Are Today?
- How Did Feminism Change New Zealand?
- Can Feminism and Marxism Come Together?
- How Did Second Wave Feminism Affect the Lives of Women?
- Does Arab Feminism Exist?
- How Does Chivalry Affect Feminism?
- Has Feminism Achieved Its Goals?
- How Does the French Feminism Theory Manifest Itself?
- Does Feminism Create Equality?
- How Has Feminism Changed the Lives of Women, Men, and Families?
- Has Feminism Benefited the American Society?
- How Does Feminism Explain Gender Differences in Comparison to the Mainstream Psychology?
- Does Feminism Discriminate Against Men?
- How Does Feminism Harm Women’s Health Care?
- Does Feminism Really Work?
- How Does Feminism Threaten Male Control and Alters Their Dominance in Society?
- What Are the Basic Traits of Liberal Feminism?
- How Has Economic Development and Globalization of South Korea Influenced the Role of Feminism?
- What Are the Concepts of Marxism and Feminism?
- How Has Feminism Developed?
- What Are the Main Theoretical and Political Differences Between First and Second Waves of Feminism?
- Why Should Men Teach Feminism?
- How Does Popular Fiction Reflect Debates About Gender and Sexuality?
- When Does Feminism Go Wrong?
- How Do Teenage Magazines Express the Post-feminism Culture?
- Why Has Patriarchy Proved Such a Contentious Issue for Feminism?
- What Are the Main Contributions of Feminism to the Contemporary Lifestyle?
- Can Modern Feminism Start the Discrimination of Men?
- Motherhood Ideas
- Gender Stereotypes Essay Titles
- Women’s Role Essay Topics
- Sociological Perspectives Titles
- Gender Discrimination Research Topics
- Masculinity Topics
- Activist Essay Titles
- Gender Issues Questions
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Essay on Feminism
500 words essay on feminism.
Feminism is a social and political movement that advocates for the rights of women on the grounds of equality of sexes. It does not deny the biological differences between the sexes but demands equality in opportunities. It covers everything from social and political to economic arenas. In fact, feminist campaigns have been a crucial part of history in women empowerment. The feminist campaigns of the twentieth century made the right to vote, public property, work and education possible. Thus, an essay on feminism will discuss its importance and impact.
Importance of Feminism
Feminism is not just important for women but for every sex, gender, caste, creed and more. It empowers the people and society as a whole. A very common misconception is that only women can be feminists.
It is absolutely wrong but feminism does not just benefit women. It strives for equality of the sexes, not the superiority of women. Feminism takes the gender roles which have been around for many years and tries to deconstruct them.
This allows people to live freely and empower lives without getting tied down by traditional restrictions. In other words, it benefits women as well as men. For instance, while it advocates that women must be free to earn it also advocates that why should men be the sole breadwinner of the family? It tries to give freedom to all.
Most importantly, it is essential for young people to get involved in the feminist movement. This way, we can achieve faster results. It is no less than a dream to live in a world full of equality.
Thus, we must all look at our own cultures and communities for making this dream a reality. We have not yet reached the result but we are on the journey, so we must continue on this mission to achieve successful results.
Impact of Feminism
Feminism has had a life-changing impact on everyone, especially women. If we look at history, we see that it is what gave women the right to vote. It was no small feat but was achieved successfully by women.
Further, if we look at modern feminism, we see how feminism involves in life-altering campaigns. For instance, campaigns that support the abortion of unwanted pregnancy and reproductive rights allow women to have freedom of choice.
Moreover, feminism constantly questions patriarchy and strives to renounce gender roles. It allows men to be whoever they wish to be without getting judged. It is not taboo for men to cry anymore because they must be allowed to express themselves freely.
Similarly, it also helps the LGBTQ community greatly as it advocates for their right too. Feminism gives a place for everyone and it is best to practice intersectional feminism to understand everyone’s struggle.
Get the huge list of more than 500 Essay Topics and Ideas
Conclusion of the Essay on Feminism
The key message of feminism must be to highlight the choice in bringing personal meaning to feminism. It is to recognize other’s right for doing the same thing. The sad part is that despite feminism being a strong movement, there are still parts of the world where inequality and exploitation of women take places. Thus, we must all try to practice intersectional feminism.
FAQ of Essay on Feminism
Question 1: What are feminist beliefs?
Answer 1: Feminist beliefs are the desire for equality between the sexes. It is the belief that men and women must have equal rights and opportunities. Thus, it covers everything from social and political to economic equality.
Question 2: What started feminism?
Answer 2: The first wave of feminism occurred in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. It emerged out of an environment of urban industrialism and liberal, socialist politics. This wave aimed to open up new doors for women with a focus on suffrage.
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380 Powerful Women’s Rights & Feminism Topics [2024]
Are you looking for perfect feminist topics? Then you’ve come to the right place. With our help, you can be sure to craft a great essay. Here, you can find feminist topics for discussion, feminism research topics and other ideas and questions for students.
Some people think all feminists hate men. It couldn’t be further from the truth! Feminists are people of all genders who believe that they are socially and politically equal. Thanks to their achievements, women’s rights around the world are progressing.
If you want to contribute to the discussion, this article has what you need. Here, our custom writing experts compiled:
- Creative feminism topics for your paper,
- Tips to help you pick the perfect topic.
Let’s dive right in!
🔝 Top 10 Feminism Essay Topics
⚖️ Top 10 Women’s Rights Essay Topics
🔬 top 10 feminism research topics.
- 📜 Women’s Rights History Topics
- 💪👩 Feminism Topics
- 📚 Feminist Theory
- 👩💻 Women Empowerment
- 👩🎓 Women’s Studies
- 🏥 Abortion Topics
- 🙅♀️ Domestic Violence
🔍 References
- The 4 waves of feminism
- Liberal vs. radical feminism
- What is feminist psychology?
- Feminist views on trans rights
- Why ecofeminism is important
- How has feminism changed culture?
- Feminism interactions with socialism
- The effects of liberal feminism on the society
- Civil rights movement’s influence on feminism
- The main proponents of feminist standpoint theory
✅ How to Choose a Feminism Topic
Picking the right topic is a crucial first step for any assignment. Check out these tips for a little starting help:
- Formulate your topic as a question , such as “What makes Alice Schwarzer a controversial feminist figure?” This trick will help you clearly determine what your essay will be about.
- Compile a keyword list . Once you have a general idea of what you want to work on, think of related words and phrases. For example, if our area of interest is “ Feminism in America , ” some of our keywords might be women’s suffrage movement , Fifteenth Amendment, birth control . You can use them to outline your research.
- A concept map can be a helpful brainstorming tool to organize your ideas. Put your area of interest (for instance, women empowerment ) in a circle in the middle. Write all related concepts around it, and connect them with lines.
- Stay clear from overused themes . Writing on popular subjects might be tempting. But can you offer a unique perspective on the issue? Choose such topics only if your answer is “yes.”
- Make sure there is enough information available . Sure, an essay on the role of women in 17th century Tongan culture sounds exciting. Unfortunately, finding good sources on this topic might prove difficult. You can refer to subjects of this kind if you’re researching a thesis or a dissertation.
Now you’re ready to find your perfect topic. Keep reading and let one of our exciting suggestions inspire you.
- Gender bias in driving
- Girls’ education in Afghanistan
- Women’s political rights in Syria
- Women’s land ownership rights
- Overincarceration of women in the US
- Resettlement of women refugees: risks
- Abortion rights in conservative countries
- Reproductive rights and HIV among women
- Honor killings as women’s rights violation
- Access to cervical cancer prevention for women of color
- Gender equity vs. gender equality
- Adverse effects of child marriage
- #Metoo movement’s impact on society
- Environmental crisis as a feminist issue
- The importance of women’s education
- Is gender equality a social justice issue?
- Why is teen pregnancy dangerous?
- How can gender biases be lessened?
- Ethics of artificial reproductive technologies
- Legacy of women’s suffrage movement
📜 History of Women’s Rights Topics
The history of women’s rights in America is long and full of struggles. The US is still far from having achieved complete equality. And in many developing countries, the situation is even worse. If you’re interested in the feminist movements and activists who paved the way thus far, this section is for you.
- The role of women in the first American settlements.
- Why weren’t women allowed to serve in combat positions in the US army until 2013?
- What happened at the Seneca Falls Convention?
- Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Women’s Suffrage in America.
- Discuss the impact of Sojourner Truth’s Ain’t I a Woman? speech.
- Explore gender equality in 20th century Britain.
- Trace the timeline of events that led to the 19th amendment.
- Why was the invention of the pill a milestone in the fight for equal rights?
- The legacy of Amelia Earhart.
- What was The Bitch Manifesto ?
- Outline the history of women in American politics.
- The role of women in the Civil Rights Movement.
- How did the Comstock Laws affect the struggle for women’s rights?
- How did Ruth Bader Ginsburg fight against gender discrimination in the US?
- In what ways did the introduction of Islamic law improve women’s rights in Arabia?
- Artemisia Gentileschi: forerunner of feminism.
- In 2016, the first female president was nominated by a major US party. Why did it take so long?
- Explore the origins of witch trials in Europe.
- What did Molly Dewson achieve?
- The history of women’s rights in Russia vs. England.
- How did WWI influence the fight for equal rights
- What were the goals of the Women’s Trade Union League?
- The effects of the Equal Pay Act.
- Study the connection between women’s health and rights throughout history.
- When did women receive the right to own property in America? Why was it important?
- Debate the role of women in history of theater.
- In the past, Russia was one of the first European countries to introduce women’s suffrage. In 2016, it decriminalized domestic violence. What led to this change?
- Women in the workforce: the long road towards workplace equality .
- Minna Canth: the history of women’s rights activism in Finland.
- Who were “The Famous Five”?
- Why was Japan quicker to enact equality laws than its European counterparts?
- The role and visibility of women writers in the 19th century.
- What problems did the National Organization for Women face?
- Discuss the foundation and impact of the Redstockings. Did they reflect the general attitude of women towards liberation at the time?
- Who or what was responsible for the failure of the ERA?
- The role of women in Ancient Greek communities.
- Alice Paul and the Silent Sentinels: how did they contribute to establishing the right to vote for women?
- Why was Betty Friedan’s The Feminine Mystique critical to the progress of feminism in the 20th century?
- The presidential candidacy of Victoria Woodhull.
- What was the purpose of the Hull House? How did it advance women’s rights?
- Why did Elizabeth Cady Stanton oppose the Fifteenth Amendment?
- Lucy Stone’s influence on the abolitionist and women’s rights movements.
- Discuss the significance of literature for the success of the suffragist movement in America.
- Slavery: compare women’s and men’s narratives.
- How Frances Ellen Watkins Harper’s speeches and poetry changed the world.
- Emmeline Pankhurst as the central figure of the UK’s suffragette movement.
- Why did it take so long for suffragette movements around the globe to gain traction?
- From a historical perspective, why weren’t women’s rights the same as human rights?
- Trace the development of women liberation in Morocco.
- Investigate the founding of women’s day.
👩👍 Feminism Topics to Research
Feminism is a global phenomenon. That’s why it’s not surprising that the term has many definitions. What to consider sexism? What can we do about it? How important is the concept of gender? Those are central questions feminists around the world seek to answer. Feminism’s areas of study include politics, sociology, and economics.
- Compare feminist issues on a global scale.
- What distinguishes radical feminists from liberal ones?
- Black feminism: is it a separate movement?
- When does “being a gentleman” become sexist?
- Is feminism always anti-racist?
- What do we need gender concepts for?
- Feminism oppression in Islamic countries.
- How do gender stereotypes form in children?
- Why are societies around the globe still struggling to achieve full equality?
- The effects of gender-oriented politics.
- Can men be feminists? (Consider Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie’s We Should All Be Feminists )
- How did the patriarchy develop?
- Would a matriarchal society be more peaceful than a patriarchal one? Draw your conclusions from real-life examples.
- Compare and contrast Judith Butler and Alice Schwarzer.
- Effectiveness of provocative methods in feminism.
- What’s the problem with unisex bathrooms in restaurants and bars?
- Discuss the prejudice transgender people face. What should we do about it?
- Why are reproductive rights a crucial issue on the way to equality?
- Describe various types of feminism.
- How can hairstyle function as a political statement?
- Which feminist movements are most prevalent in Asia?
- Trace the history of feminist ethics.
- What’s the “pink tax,” and why should it be abolished?
- Discuss Audre Lorde’s feminism.
- How does feminist research methodology influence education?
- Sexism in advertising: why is it still a problem?
- What are the goals of Girls Who Code?
- The role of literacy politics in achieving gender equality.
- Stay at home moms: are they a step back on the feminist agenda?
- Explore the origins of color-coding pink and blue as girl and boy colors, respectively.
- Are beauty pageants harmful to women’s positive body image?
- The problem of ableism in intersectional feminist movements.
- What is identity politics, and why is it important?
- New Zealand’s Prime Minister, Jacinda Ardern, recently introduced her new cabinet. Of the 20 people who serve in it, eight are women, five Maori, three belong to the minority Pasifika, and three are queer. Is it what all future cabinets should strive for?
- What makes racism a feminist issue?
- Describe how objectification works and why it is harmful.
- A history of women inventors who didn’t get credit for their innovations.
- Female circumcision as an example of women’s oppression disguised as a cultural tradition.
- The infantilization of women: origins and effects.
- Define how feminism influences science.
- How does one avoid gender bias when raising a child?
- What popular ideas about feminism are myths?
- Gender inequality in politics of India and Iran.
- What is the definition of ecofeminism? Describe its merits.
- How do men benefit from feminism?
- Why do we need gender equality in language?
- Problems of reconciling religion and the LGBTQ community.
- More and more fitness clubs introduce “women’s hours.” Some bars are only open for women. They claim to do this to create safe spaces. What’s your position on this development?
- Anti-feminism: is it a movement for the far-right?
- The impact of #metoo on work culture.
📚 Feminist Theory Topics to Look Into
Feminist theory criticizes how culture perpetuates misogyny. The best way to look at it is to divide feminism into three waves:
- First-wave feminism (the late 1700s – early 1900s). It includes the women’s suffrage movement.
- Second-wave feminism (the 1960s – ’70s.) Key points are equal working conditions and feminist political activism.
- Third-wave feminism (1990s – today). It encompasses not only women but all marginalized groups.
Take a look at culture from a feminist perspective with our topics:
- Discuss the concept of feminism in Barbie Doll by Marge Piercy.
- Explain the success of Gillian Armstrong’s Little Women.
- What inequalities between men and women does Mary Wollstonecraft mention in A Vindication of the Rights of Women ?
- Masculinity and femininity in William Somerset Maugham’s Of Human Bondage.
- An existentialist view: how Simone de Beauvoir influenced the feminist discourse.
- The role of women in Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie’s Americanah.
- Discuss the power dynamics between men and women in the Terminator series.
- How does rap music perpetuate traditional concepts of masculinity?
- Daisy’s character in The Great Gatsby through a feminist lens.
- Write about the depiction of women and the patriarchy in Mad Men.
- What distinguishes the third wave of feminism from the other two?
- Women’s history and media in Susan Douglas’ Where the Girls Are .
- What is the goal of gynocriticism?
- Possibilities of sisterhood in Hulu’s TV show A Handmaid’s Tale .
- Sylvia Plath’s The Bell Jar : where does Esther Greenwood see her place in society?
- Early feminist perspectives in Virginia Woolf’s A Room of One’s Own.
- Compare and contrast how the characters in Mulan react to the protagonist as a woman vs. a man.
- Life stages of women in Alfonso Cuarón’s Roma .
- Why were feminists unhappy about Prado’s exhibition Uninvited Guests ?
- Sexuality and society in Céline Sciamma’s Portrait of a Lady on Fire .
- Gender expectations in The Little Mermaid .
- Feminist concepts and issues in Netflix’s Thirteen Reasons Why .
- Challenging traditional femininity: independence and rebellion in Thelma and Louise.
- The target audience of Mad Max: Fury Road is stated as male. Yet, the central character of the film Furiosa is a strong rebel woman. Does this make it a feminist movie?
- Persepolis : what it means to grow up as a liberal woman in Iran.
- Blockbuster movies have an enormous reach. Does it obligate them to support feminist issues?
- Marjorie Liu’s Monstress : what does it tell us about feminism?
- The Berlin Film Festival announced that they would no longer crown the best actor and actress. Instead, they honor the best performance in either a leading or supporting role. What are the consequences of this?
- What does it mean to criticize an art piece from a feminist point of view?
- Compare and contrast the portrayal of female characters in horror genre throughout the years.
- Analyze Donna Haraway’s A Cyborg Manifesto . Why does the author use the cyborg metaphor? What arguments does it help bring across?
- How do black women characters in Toni Morrison’s novels experience society?
- What makes various awards an important instrument of feminism?
- Analyze Katniss Everdeen archetype in Hunger Games.
- Many classic children’s stories include outdated depictions of women and people of color. Because of this, some people are demanding to ban or censor them. Do you think this is the right way to tackle the problem?
- What does the term “male gaze” mean, and why is it a problem?
- The role of the body in feminist aesthetics.
- Discuss the impact of women philosophers on renowned male scholars of their time.
- What distinguishes feminist art from other art forms?
- Debate the political dimension of using women in body art.
- Does the message in Lemonade make Beyoncé a feminist icon?
- Why are misogynist song lyrics still widely accepted?
- How did Aretha Franklin’s music impact the Civil Rights Movement in America?
- Oscar Wilde’s The Picture of Dorian Gray from a queer theoretical perspective.
- Objectification in film: analyzing Rachel’s character in The Dark Knight.
- Investigate the Star Wars’ representation problem. How did the franchise develop into a battleground for diversity?
- Misogynist vs. psycho: feminist aspects of David Fincher’s Gone Girl.
- Was the diversity in Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse a good thing?
- The cultural significance of strong female characters.
- Examine the concept of femininity in William Golding’s Lord of the Flies.
👩💻 Women Empowerment Topics to Write About
Women were excluded from crucial work areas such as the military and politics for a long time. This situation is changing now. Empowerment programs encourage women to seek professions in typically male-dominated areas. Do you want to research ways of increasing women’s control over their choices? Check out the following topics:
- Joan of Arc as a leadership idol.
- The role of She Should Run in encouraging women to run for political positions.
- What should we do about higher education barriers for African American women?
- Examine current trends in female empowerment.
- Importance of the women’s empowerment principles.
- How can businesses use the Gender Gap Analysis Tool to promote equality in their companies?
- Why is there such a big gap between committing to advancing equality and corporate efforts to implement women’s empowerment programs?
- What business practices need to change so that men and women benefit from work programs equally?
- Analyse the reasons behind poor body image among young women.
- How does the transition from cash to digital payrolls help empower women in developing countries?
- What challenges do large companies face when it comes to gender equality?
- How does making fashion a circular economy impact women?
- Discuss what everyone can do to empower the women in their community.
- Why is it important to demand fair pay?
- The impact of Reese Witherspoon’s media company Hello Sunshine.
- What does it mean to be empowered?
- The influence of climate change on gender equality.
- Women in leadership positions: the rhetoric and the reality.
- Social stigma and family planning: the work of HER project in Kenya.
- CARE: why providing women with access to clean water is crucial for empowerment.
- How do you teach a girl that she can make a difference?
- Achievements of the global Women Deliver Conferences.
- How does Pro-Mujer help underprivileged women in Latin America?
- Why is workplace health a particular concern for women empowerment?
- What can businesses do to bridge the financial inclusion gender gap?
- Debate how strengthening women’s social position helps fight discrimination against all kinds of marginalized groups.
- Analyze the various benefits of women empowerment.
- Fighting gender stereotypes in the 21st century.
- The connection between a lack of women in politics and missing programs to support marginalized groups.
- What are patriarchal taboos that keep women from seeking power?
- How can a gender perspective on resilience activities assist businesses in finding ways to combat climate change?
- What methods does the #WithHer movement use to raise awareness of violence against women?
- The Spotlight Initiative: training sex workers to escape violence in Haiti.
- Define the gender digital divide.
- What’s the problem with the female gendering of AI assistants?
- Criticize the Gender Empowerment Measure.
- What role does the internet play in empowering girls?
- Compare the Gender Parity Index in the US and South Africa.
- How is Every Mother Counts working to decrease deaths related to pregnancies?
- Debate the reliability of the Gender Development Index.
- Child Marriage: the impact of Girls Not Brides.
- What are the political and social constraints that hamper women’s empowerment in Nigeria?
- How can you encourage women to give public speeches?
- How does e-learning help women worldwide gain independence?
- Explore the influence of the women’s rights movement on anti-descrimination activities.
- Challenges of women business in Mauritius.
- Labibah Hashim as an inspirational figure for women empowerment in Lebanon.
- How did Malaka Saad’s magazine al-Jens al-Latif inspire women to educate themselves in the Arab world?
- The development of sexual harassment policies in East Africa.
- How does microfinance in South America help women to start businesses?
👩🎓 Interesting Women’s Studies Topics for an Essay
Women’s or gender studies is an interdisciplinary science. It combines research from many fields, such as economics, psychology, and the natural sciences. Key aspects are women’s experiences and cultural as well as social constructs surrounding gender.
- What is velvet rope discrimination?
- The IT sphere is comparatively modern. Why does it still have such a gender gap problem?
- Is paid maternity/paternity leave a fundamental right for workers?
- How do we break the glass ceiling in today’s society?
- Discussing social taboos: postnatal depression.
- Women in religion: why shouldn’t women be priestesses?
- The queer of color critique: history and theory.
- Should feminists be against supporting care policies?
- Does foreign aid benefit women entrepreneurship in Sub-Saharan Africa?
- Gender bias in criminal justice.
- What does legalized prostitution mean for sex workers?
- Does “stealthing” make otherwise consensual sex nonconsensual? Should this practice have legal consequences?
- The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks : a gendered analysis.
- Rojava: give an overview of the egalitarian feminist society.
- The role of women in modern nation-building processes.
- How do we include transgender athletes into sex-segregated competitive sports?
- Discuss the significance of gender in the euthanasia debate.
- Chivalry and capital punishment : why are women who commit murders less likely to be sentenced to death?
- Why do men have less confidence in women’s abilities than in men’s?
- Are hijabs always a symbol of oppression?
- Write about the role of feminism in international relations.
- Universal basic income: changing perspectives for women.
- Gamergate: what does it tell us about some men’s view on the video game industry?
- Discuss the social construction of gender roles.
- What is benevolent sexism, and why is it a problem?
- The military seems to be especially notorious when it comes to discriminating against LGBT people. Where might this originate from?
- Many army officers don’t hide that they don’t want women to serve. Why do women still do it? Why should they?
- The Eurovision Song Contest gave drag queen Conchita Wurst an enormous audience. How did she use this opportunity?
- Why are men who wear typically female clothing stigmatized?
- How have The Guerilla Girls shaped the art world in the past 30 years?
- Healthcare: what challenges do transgender patients face?
- Femme invisibility: discrimination inside the LGBT community.
- How did the idea develop that gay men and lesbians have to act and look a certain way to be considered queer?
- The history of sodomy laws in the US.
- “The Squad” as an example of the current success of left-wing women in politics.
- Should women use their attractiveness to get what they want?
- Are the careers of women scientists more affected by turmoil than those of their male counterparts?
- Do children’s toys restrict gender criteria?
- Many drugs are only tested on male subjects. How does this affect women?
- Enumerate some qualities that are seen as positive in men and negative in women. Why do you think this happens?
- Discuss the significance of the “Transgender Tipping Point.”
- The meaning of “home” and home spaces for women over the centuries.
- How do gender issues influence lawmaking?
- Analyze queer narratives from post-soviet states. How do gender norms in these countries differ from those in your community?
- Transgender representation in media: views of Viviane Namaste and Julia Serano.
- Nuclear power between politics and culture: a feminist perspective.
- Women guards in national socialist concentration camps.
- What reasons do women have for sex tourism?
- The problem of eurocentrism in European education.
- Explore the connection between citizenship and race.
🏥 Abortion Topics to Research
For some, abortion is a fundamental healthcare right. Others view it as a criminal act. Many conservative governments continue to restrict the access to this procedure. Because of this discrepancy, abortion remains a fiercely debated topic all around the globe. Consider one of these thought-provoking ideas:
- Why was Roe v. Wade such a landmark decision?
- Discuss why some CEOs step up against abortion bans .
- Abortion in transgender and intersex people.
- From a biological point of view, when does life begin?
- What signs should indicate that it is too late to terminate the pregnancy?
- Who influenced the abortion debate before Roe v. Wade?
- Is abortion morally wrong? If so, does that mean it’s always impermissible?
- Under what circumstances is terminating a life justified?
- Who or what defines if a being has the right to life or not?
- Analyse the access to abortion clinics as a policy issue.
- Reproductive rights and medical access in Sub-Saharan Africa.
- People terminate pregnancies, whether it’s illegal or not. Why would one still outlaw abortions?
- Investigate the occurrence of forced abortions during China’s one-child policy .
- Is the fetus’ right to life more important than the mother’s right to have control over her body?
- What rights are more essential than the right to life?
- Discuss women’s health as their integral right.
- Should there be restrictions on abortions?
- Can better access to contraceptives reduce the number of abortions?
- At what point does a fetus become a human being?
- Is selective abortion ethical?
- Germany’s paragraph 219a prohibits the display of information on abortion services. In 2019, the government decided to revise it, and now patients can consult a list provided by the department for health education. Is this compromise enough?
- What is the moral status of a human embryo?
- Should pregnancy terminations be free for low-income women?
- Is the criminalization of abortion discrimination?
- The social and psychological impact of pregnancy terminations on families.
- Should the man have a say in whether the woman has an abortion or not?
- What non-religious persuasive arguments against abortion are there?
- Are there good and bad reasons for ending a pregnancy?
- Should it be required for teenagers to have their parents’ consent for the abortion procedure?
- Examine the arguments of pro-life movement.
- Analyze how the public’s attitude towards abortion has changed over the past 50 years.
- Is withholding access to abortions a violation of human rights?
- After week-long strikes, the Polish government has delayed its proposed abortion ban. Is this a victory for the local feminist movement?
- Compare and contrast the various legal abortion methods.
- Analyze A Defense of Abortion by Judith Jarvis Thomson.
- How is abortion viewed in Eastern vs. Western countries?
- Describe potential health issues surrounding late-term pregnancy terminations.
- How can we prevent unsafe abortions ?
- What complications can occur during the abortion process?
- Debate the impact of the March for Life.
- Discuss whether women should have an abortion if diagnostics show fetal abnirmalities.
- What does Planned Parenthood do, and why is the organization important?
- Should Helms Amendment be repealed?
- How does the Hyde Amendment impact women of color in particular?
- Is forcing a woman to carry out an undesired pregnancy morally permissible?
- Mexican newspaper coverage on issues surrounding abortions.
- What are the possible health consequences of an abortion?
- Reproductive justice and women of color: the history of SisterSong.
- Compare organizations that offer information on abortions.
- How is the topic of abortion approached in Jason Reitman’s film Juno ?
🙅♀️ Domestic Violence Topics for a Paper
Domestic violence comes in many shapes, and it’s not always directed against women. It traumatizes not only the victim but the whole family. The long-term impacts on the victims are catastrophic, too. If you want to write a research paper on this topic, be sure to steel yourself before starting your reading.
- How did the COVID-19 lockdowns influence domestic violence cases?
- Domestic violence in closed religious communities.
- Does the type of abuse differ if the perpetrator is a man or a woman?
- Compare the problem of spousal abuse in the US, Asia, and Africa.
- Why do many victims choose not to report their cases of domestic violence?
- From a psychological perspective, why does domestic violence happen?
- Domestic violence prevention: the role of parental communication.
- Should a person with a history of abuse have custody over their child?
- Why are men more likely to resort to violence than women?
- Identify risk factors that can lead to elder abuse.
- Trace how the frequency of reports on domestic violence has changed in your community over the past 30 years.
- Why do some victims choose to stay with their abusive partners?
- What actions would you classify as domestic abuse?
- Domestic violence and feminism in Bell Hooks’ theory.
- Cultural perspectives on domestic violence: Saudi Arabia vs. Japan.
- What do different religions say about IPV?
- If a victim kills its abuser to escape the violence, what legal consequences should they face?
- Examine the legislature of different states concerning marital rape .
- The social and legal concept of consent in marriage.
- Domestic violence and integrity among women of color.
- Abuse in teenage relationships.
- Common psychological characteristics of a person who commits parricide.
- Effects of emotional neglect on a child’s mental development .
- Discuss the effectiveness of art therapy for victims of domestic violence.
- The significance of Oregon v. Rideout.
- Explore the link between spousal and animal abuse.
- What is the Battered Woman Syndrome?
- Analyze different forms of domestic violence using case studies.
- Study the psychology behind victim blaming.
- How do mental illnesses and domestic violence affect each other?
- What are the signs of coercive control? How can one get out of it?
- The problem of control in gay relationships.
- How does one develop Stockholm Syndrome, and what does it entail?
- Analyze the discourse surrounding domestic violence in Hong Kong.
- The pseudo-family as a sociological concept.
- Compare cases of domestic violence in military and religious families.
- What is compassionate homicide, and how does the law deal with it?
- If a juvenile delinquent was abused as a child, should that lessen their sentence?
- Parental abduction: why do parents feel the need to kidnap their children?
- Domestic violence: new solutions.
- Is one sibling bullying the other a form of domestic abuse?
- How do communities typically respond to domestic violence?
- Explore the link between women’s suicide and abuse.
- What can healthcare specialists do to identify victims of violence more effectively?
- What are the economic and social consequences of leaving an abusive relationship
- How does Netflix’s show You portray the relationship between a stalker and his victim?
- Treatment of perpetrators of domestic violence.
- Why do some people repeatedly end up in relationships with IPV?
- What are the main motives for femicides?
- Discuss the psychological aggression men and women suffer during separation processes.
With all these great ideas in mind, you’re ready to ace your assignment. Good luck!
Further reading:
- 560 Unique Controversial Topics & Tips for a Great Essay
- 480 Sociology Questions & Topics with Bonus Tips
- 182 Free Ideas for Argumentative or Persuasive Essay Topics
- A List of 450 Powerful Social Issues Essay Topics
- 147 Social Studies Topics for Your Research Project
- 255 Unique Essay Topics for College Students [Update]
- 229 Good Dissertation Topics and Thesis Ideas for Ph.D. & Masters
- 150 Argumentative Research Paper Topics [Upd.]
- Feminism: Encyclopedia Britannica
- Picking a Topic: University of Michigan-Flint
- Women’s History Milestones: History.com
- Women Rising: Women’s Activism That Has Shaped the World as You Know It: UN Women
- Topics in Feminism: The University of Sydney
- Four Waves of Feminism: Pacific University
- Feminist Philosophy: Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy
- Women’s Empowerment: BSR
- Women Empowerment: United Nations Populations Fund
- Women’s & Gender Studies Research Network: SSRN
- Gender Studies: UCLA
- Key Facts on Abortion: Amnesty.org
- Abortion Ethics: NIH
- New Perspectives on Domestic Violence: Frontiers
- Domestic Violence against Women: Mayo Clinic
- What Is Domestic Abuse?: United Nations
- Feminist Research: SAGE Publications Inc
- Topic Guide: Feminism: Broward College
- Facts and Figures: Economic Empowerment: UN Women
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From the academy to the streets: Documenting the healing power of black feminist creative expression, Tunisia L. Riley. PDF. Developing Feminist Activist Pedagogy: A Case Study Approach in the Women's Studies Department at the University of South Florida, Stacy Tessier. PDF
2013. Inside the Master's House: Gender, Sexuality, and the 'Impossible' History of Slavery in Jamaica, 1753-1786. 2013. Illuminating the Darkness Beneath the Lamp: Im Yong-sin's Disappearance from History and Rewriting the History of Women in Korea's Colonial Period (1910-1945) East Asian Languages and Civilizations.
thesis, and you will reach the more important but elusive objective beyond it. The process of writing a thesis can be a glorious adventure. I hope that you will experience the exhilaration of ... students have relied on classic feminist theory in their projects; many have conducted literary or visual close readings; others have used statistical ...
Published by Owen Ingram at January 2nd, 2023 , Revised On June 5, 2024. Feminism is a historical, social, and political movement founded by women to achieve gender equality and remove injustice. Feminism is an important topic that has been frequently debated in a male-dominated society since the nineteenth century.
Much of the literature regarding feminist identity has drawn from Downing and Roush's (1985) five stage model of feminist identity development, intended for women, which describes the process by which women come to learn about feminist values and incorporate them into their lives. This model is the only model that exists regarding feminist
intervention in broader debates on feminist and intersectional research practices. This thesis is mostly a theoretical thesis focussed on methodologies and methods.1 Chapter one deals with questions that concern how to conduct feminist research. The main concern here is: What is my role as a researcher within a research process?
I celebrate Frigga Haug's Thirteen Theses on Marxism Feminism (), which she regards as the unfinished product of a collective process.This Special Issue in Capital & Class testifies to the inspirational nature of the theses and the ideas they elicit for debate, enabling us to seek new answers to old questions and pose new ones. In thesis 7, Haug points to the limitations of traditional ...
This thesis examines why feminist progress at the level of law has not delivered real change. It argues that the work of feminists, whose efforts helped transform the law, must be extended to address the next challenge: the gap between the promise of the law, and reality. Applying feminist observations to the prevailing set of
elopment of the feminist movement can be shown in three visualadaptations. o determine this development th. adaptations will be linked to the feministwave of their r. spective times. In this way Pride. nd Prejudice (1940) by Robert Leonard islinked to the firs. femi.
An introduction to postcolonial feminism and postcolonial feminist theory Katrine Haavardsholm MA Lehramt Sek 1, English & History Katrine.haavardsholm (at) stud.ph-karlsruhe.de ... writing my bachelor thesis on the women's rights movement in Germany, but have not learned a great deal about feminism for women of colour. It was important for ...
History is full of examples of unruly women speaking truth to power. However, the last century of feminist history has seen the remarkable emergence of global movements nurtured by transnational flows of information, as changes in technology and greater human mobility connected local and regional feminist movements, creating worldwide networks of transmission of texts, practices, and discourses.
"To be 'feminist' in any authentic sense of the term is to want for all people, female and male, liberation from sexist role patterns, domination, and oppression." bell hooks made this clear and powerful statement in her 1981 study of sexism, racism, and the feminist and civil rights movements Ain't I a Woman: Black Women and Feminism. Almost 40 years on, the world is still reckoning ...
The thesis of this paper is that, while characteristics of all three "waves" of feminism were present within the motion picture, third-wave feminism prevailed as most apparent. This study began with a close examination of the cinematic version of The Hunger Games and feminism's history within the United States to date; it then delved into
The thesis will introduce four writers and explore the differences between male and female writing on the topic of feminism, due to the fact that feminism is not only related to women, one of the authors is a male writer. The examined writers will be Charlotte Brontë, Thomas Hardy, Virginia Woolf and Jeanette Winterson and the novels
Brenton Wimmer, MEd PhD Graduate Student Educational Leadership & Policy Studies Jeannine Rainbolt College of Education University of Oklahoma. education and student affairs: Theory, research, narratives and practice from feminist perspectives. % ,-., Women of Color in Higher Education: Turbulent Past, Promising Future, 012.34.
es such as science fi ction and modernist poetry. Written by leading scholars and focusing on the literary trajectories of feminism's noted contributors, Literature and the Development of Feminist Th eory ultimately provides a new per-spective on feminism's theoretical context, bringing into view. he ef ects of literary form on feminist ...
Abstract—This article is dedicated to the study of profound meaning underlying in the female social, psychological and sexual reality in the novel Pride and Prejudice in Victorian England. It explores into the heroine Elizabeth to study Austen's special perspective on feminism in the patriarchal society. In conclusion, this thesis examines ...
5 Essays About Feminism. On the surface, the definition of feminism is simple. It's the belief that women should be politically, socially, and economically equal to men. Over the years, the movement expanded from a focus on voting rights to worker rights, reproductive rights, gender roles, and beyond. Modern feminism is moving to a more ...
The feminist critique is an aspect that seeks to explore the topic of men domination in the social, economic, and political sectors. Feminism in "Heart of Darkness" and "Apocalypse Now". However, one realizes that she is voiceless in the novel, which highlights the insignificance of role of women in Heart of Darkness.
Expert Answers. Feminism has gotten to be a very broad subject in recent years. It used to be that "feminism" was understood to focus on women's right to vote and to own their own property. But ...
500 Words Essay On Feminism. Feminism is a social and political movement that advocates for the rights of women on the grounds of equality of sexes. It does not deny the biological differences between the sexes but demands equality in opportunities. It covers everything from social and political to economic arenas.
This thesis contributes a new inquiry regarding Arab American literature in joining the subject of literature written by women and the study of Arab American masculinities. It delves into the construction (from both outsider and insider perspectives) of Arab American masculinities, at the same time as it expounds on the history of Arab ...
The best way to look at it is to divide feminism into three waves: First-wave feminism (the late 1700s - early 1900s). It includes the women's suffrage movement. Second-wave feminism (the 1960s - '70s.) Key points are equal working conditions and feminist political activism. Third-wave feminism (1990s - today).