12 Facts About Third-wave feminism

1.

Third-wave feminism is an iteration of the feminist movement that began in the early 1990s, prominent in the decades prior to the fourth wave.

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2.

Walker sought to establish that third-wave feminism was not just a reaction, but a movement in itself, because the feminist cause had more work ahead.

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3.

Cherrie Moraga and Gloria E Anzaldua had published the anthology This Bridge Called My Back, which, along with All the Women Are White, All the Blacks Are Men, But Some of Us Are Brave, edited by Akasha Hull, Patricia Bell-Scott, and Barbara Smith, argued that second-wave feminism had focused primarily on the problems of white women.

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4.

Arguably the biggest challenge to third-wave feminism was that the gains of second-wave feminism were taken for granted, and the importance of feminism not understood.

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5.

Proponents of third-wave feminism said that it allowed women to define feminism for themselves.

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6.

Fact that Third-wave feminism is no longer limited to arenas where we expect to see it—NOW, Ms.

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7.

Third-wave feminism feminists used personal narratives as a form of feminist theory.

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8.

Second wave of Third-wave feminism is often accused of being elitist and ignoring groups such as women of colour and transgender women, instead, focusing on white, middle class, cisgender women.

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9.

Third-wave feminism regarded race, social class, and transgender rights as central issues.

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10.

Conceptual and real-world 'trap' of choice Third-wave feminism has led women to challenge each other rather than the patriarchy.

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11.

Individualism conceived of as 'choice' does not empower women; it silences them and prevents Third-wave feminism from becoming a political movement and addressing the real issues of distribution of resources.

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12.

Furthermore, if Third-wave feminism is a global movement, she argued, the fact that the "first-, second-, and third waves time periods correspond most closely to American feminist developments" raises serious problems about how Third-wave feminism fails to recognize the history of political issues around the world.

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