16 Facts About Fourth-wave feminism

1.

Fourth-wave feminism is a feminist movement that began around 2012 and is characterized by a focus on the empowerment of women, the use of internet tools, and intersectionality.

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2.

Fourth-wave feminism argues for equal pay for equal work and that the equal opportunities sought for girls and women should extend to boys and men in order to overcome gender norms.

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3.

Fourth-wave feminism developed slowly, globally via the media and the Internet.

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4.

Knowledge about Fourth-wave feminism was gained informally, and it developed a virtual academy where feminists learned that "the personal is political"; it did not emerge from structured feminist learning.

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5.

Early fourth-wave Spanish feminism used television and newspapers as the primary social network.

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6.

Anglospheric first-wave Fourth-wave feminism is second-wave for Europeans and Latin American feminists.

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7.

Fourth-wave feminism feminists have begun promoting solutions to avoid these issues, such as raising children as gender neutral.

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8.

Fourth-wave feminism feminists have argued that reinforced gender stereotypes create pressure for men to be breadwinners, as opposed to women, who feel obligated to take on the role of homemakers.

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9.

Canadian art historian Ruth Phillips argues that fourth-wave feminism falls within the broader agenda of financial, political, and environmental concerns and is recognized as a key factor in alleviating poverty, improving women's health, and achieving economic growth.

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10.

Fourth-wave feminism posted in her Instagram, where she has more than 12.

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11.

Latin American fourth-wave feminism encompasses simultaneously distinct movements, many of which are in tension with one another, some refer to Latin American 'feminisms' in the plural.

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12.

Kira Cochrane has argued that fourth-wave feminism is "defined by technology" and characterized particularly by the use of Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, YouTube, Tumblr, and blogs such as Feministing to challenge misogyny.

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13.

Fourth-wave feminism feminist are using the internet as a tool to self-represent and self-advocate however, some social media platforms are limiting that activity to its viewers.

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14.

Conservative critique of fourth-wave feminism is that when women believe that the world is set against them through social systems such as patriarchy, they will abandon all efforts instead of competing with men as equals.

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15.

Author Joanna Williams writes in The American Conservative that fourth-wave feminism encourages women to "call upon external helpmates, like the state, and ugly identity politics that push good men away".

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16.

Jennifer Simpkins of The Huffington Post argued in 2014 that fourth-wave feminism had created a hostile, Mean Girls–like atmosphere, in which women are more likely to tear each other down.

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