Examples of feminist in the following topics:
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The Feminist Perspective
- Feminist theory analyzes gender stratification through the intersection of gender, race, and class.
- The first and second waves of the feminist movement were primarily driven by white women, who did not adequately represent the feminist movement as a whole.
- Feminist theory is the extension of feminism into theoretical or philosophical discourse.
- The feminist perspective of gender stratification more recently takes into account intersectionality, a feminist sociological theory first highlighted by feminist-sociologist Kimberlé Crenshaw.
- The first and second waves of the feminist movement were primarily driven by white women, who did not adequately represent the feminist movement as a whole.
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The Feminist Perspective
- The feminist perspective has much in common with the conflict perspective.
- Feminist thought has a rich history, which is categorized into three waves.
- Over the years, feminist demands have changed.
- First-wave feminists fought for basic citizenship rights, such as the right to vote, while third wave feminists are concerned with more complex social movements, like post-structuralism.
- Identify the main tenets of the feminist perspective and its research focus, distinguishing the three waves of feminist theory
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The Influence of Feminism
- One of the first self-proclaimed feminist art classes in the United States, the Feminist Art Program, was started in the fall of 1970 at Fresno State University by visiting artist Judy Chicago.
- Gallery were formed to provide visibility for art by feminist artists.
- There are thousands of examples of women associated with the feminist art movement.
- Miriam Schapiro, co-founder of the Feminist Art Program at Cal Arts
- Describe the origin, evolution, and influence of the feminist movement on art during the later 20th century.
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The Feminist Movement
- The feminist movement refers to a series of campaigns for cultural, political, economic, and social equality for women.
- The history of feminist movements has been divided into three "waves" by feminist scholars.
- The first wave refers to the feminist movement of the nineteenth through early twentieth centuries, which focused mainly on women's suffrage .
- Anarcha-feminists believe that class struggle and anarchy against the state.
- First-wave feminists marching for women's suffrage.
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Feminist Theory
- Feminist Theory often dramatically influences scientific theory and practice within such fields.
- Below we offer summaries of the major conceptual approaches within Feminist Theory.
- Radical feminists believe that women are oppressed by our patriarchal society.
- Some believe this is a temporary stage while others see this as a permanent goal.Cultural feminists, like radical feminists, believe that women are oppressed by our patriarchal society.
- Black feminists believe that many inequalities are important in society today, not only gender.
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Examples of Social Movements
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Gender
- There are thousands of examples of women associated with the feminist art movement.
- There are thousands of examples of women associated with the feminist art movement.
- Judy Chicago, founder of the first known Feminist Art Program (in Fresno, California);
- Miriam Schapiro, co-founder of the Feminist Art Program at Cal Arts;
- Analyze the growth of the postmodern feminist art movement in the 1960s and 1970s.
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The Feminist Perspective
- Feminists view the family as a historical institution that has maintained and perpetuated sexual inequalities.
- Both feminist and masculist authors have decried such predetermined roles as unjust.
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Gender and Social Movements
- The feminist movement refers to a series of campaigns on issues pertaining to women, such as reproductive rights and women's suffrage.
- Second-wave feminism refers to a period of feminist activity beginning in the early 1960s and through the late 1980s.
- Immediately after WWII, a new global dimension was added to the feminist cause through the formation of the United Nations (UN).
- These divisions among feminists included: First World vs.
- Illustrate how the various waves of the feminist movement helped advance women in terms of social status and equality
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Political Art
- Political art in the nineties was a form of protest for the feminist movement against patriarchy and women's exclusion in the arts.
- Emerging forms of feminism and feminist art of the time was particularly influential to activist art.
- The strategies deployed by feminist artists paralleled those of activist artists.
- Discuss how personal revelation through art was used as a political tool by feminists in the 1990s.