| feminism |
The belief that society is disadvantageous to women, systematically depriving them of individual choice, political power, economic opportunity and intellectual recognition.
Ãâó: www.comune.venezia.it/atlante/documents/glossary/n...
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| feminism |
(a) a range of contemporary theoretical perspectives (political, sociological, legal, psychoanalytic, literary, philosophical) in which women's experiences are examined in relation to actual and perceived differences between the power and status of men and women; (b) a social justice movement in which issues of particular importance for women (eg domestic violence, pay equity, globalization) are analysed, understood, and addressed from feminist perspectives. ...
Ãâó: familypride.uwo.ca/glossary/glossary5.html
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| feminism |
a philosophy embracing economics, politics, literature and indeed every aspect of the humanities, and which seeks to posit women on an equal footing with men; and in doing so to show how men have established and reinforced their historical dominance. The development of feminism has been rapid since 1945 but was articulated much earlier by Mary Wollstonecraft and Virginia Woolf.
Ãâó: members.fortunecity.es/fabianvillegas/drama/glossa...
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| feminism |
is a term commonly and quite indiscriminately used. Some of the currently used definitions are: (a) a doctrine advocating social and political rights for women equal to those of men; (b) an organized movement for the attainment of these rights; (c) the assertion of the claims of women as a group and the body of theory women have created; (d) belief in the necessity of large-scale social change in order to increase the power of of women. source
Ãâó: www.ruralwomyn.net/define.html
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| feminism |
The word feminism means many things to many people. Though Catherine MacKinnon's understanding of what feminism ought to mean does not represent all feminism, her definition of feminist theory is helpful as a general characterization: "A theory is feminist to the extent it is persuaded that women have been unjustly unequal to men because of the social meaning of their bodies" (35). ...
Ãâó: jamesfaulconer.byu.edu/definitions.htm
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