The word feminism comes from French word féminisme and according to the Cambridge online dictionary feminism is “the belief that women should be allowed the same rights, power, and opportunities as men and be treated in the same way, or the set of activities intended to achieve this state.” The term ‘feminism’ itself is used to describe a cultural, political or economic movement aiming for equal rights for both women and men. Nonetheless, the terms ‘feminism’ and ‘feminist’ did not gain widespread meaning use until the 1970s when they started to be used in the public parlance more frequently.
The feminist movement involves sociological and political theories concerning with gender difference issues. The movement has been here for many decades, and British women have started to fight against the oppression during mid 1850s when the first feminists started to advocate their thoughts about inequality and when the first suffragette movement emerged, since then women have started working on accomplishing their goals to have the same rights and to have the same position in society as men have.
The feminist framework also indicates how problems are defined and the kinds of questions to be asked. For example, according to definition in Theoretical Perspectives on Gender and Development written by Jane L. Parpart et al inequality results from “the need to establish unequal incentives to motivate the most talented people to do the most important jobs efficiently in society,” other definition from the same book also says that the inequality results from “the practice of providing differential rewards to keep a less powerful working class fragmented by gender and race.”
A brief historical background
Britain as well as France were among the first countries where women started fighting for their rights, education, and above all respect. Simone de Beauvoir wrote that “the first time we see a woman take up her pen in defence of her sex was when Christine de Pizan wrote Epitre au Dieud'Amour (Epistle to the God of Love) in the 15th century.” However, it was not until the early 19th century when women began to achieve changes in society, it was Mary Wollstonecraft, author of the commanding Vindication of the Rights of Woman, who received the lion’s share of attention.
Wollstonecraft was a woman who, as Arianne Chernock says in her book Menandthe Making of Modern British Feminism, “spoke up, quite loudly, for what had been until then a largely silent section of the human race.” Scholars, even today, consider Mary Wollstonecraft to be a founding mother of British feminism and her Vindicationofthe RightsofWomancan be considered as a first unambiguous feminist work. In addition, one of the main social reformers of early 19th century was also Florence Nightingale, who was convicted that women had “all the potential of men but none of the opportunities,” she pioneered the importance of nursing schools and also advocated better education for women. Nonetheless, not only women tried to establish equal opportunities for both sexes, feminist men also helped advance women’s liberation, although there were not many of them. One of them was an English philosopher, political economist and feminist John Stuart Mill, who was inspired by his wife
women’s right advocate Harriet Taylor Mill. Mill once declared: “The principle which regulates the existing social relations between the two sexes—the legal subordination of one sex to the other—is wrong itself, and now one of the chief hindrances to human improvement; and that it ought to be replaced by a principle of perfect equality, admitting no power or privilege on the one side, nor disability on the other.” Mill also became the first British Member of Parliament to introduce a bill calling for women to receive the vote.
Feminists and scholars have divided the movement into three separate waves and each of the waves is significant for the movement in achieving different goals.
The first wave refers mainly to the women’s suffrage movement in the 19th and early 20th centuries in the United Kingdom and in the United States, focusing on women gaining the right to vote. Originally, the first wave focused on the promotion of equality and property rights for women and the opposition to chattel marriage and ownership of married women and their children by their husbands. As Margaret Waters claims in her book called Feminism: A Very Short Introduction, “for a married woman, her home becomes a prison-house. The house itself, as well as everything in it, belongs to the husband, and of all fixtures the most abject is his breeding machine, the wife. Married women are in fact slaves, their situation no better than that of Negroes in the West
Indies.” Women at that time were treated no better like servants with hardly any rights and possession. Marion Reid in her essay A Plea for Women, which has been described as the most thorough and effective statement by a woman since Wollstonecraft’s A VindicationoftheRightsofWoman, argues “if women’s rights are not the same as those of man, what are they?” in one sense, she admits, “woman was made for man, yet in another and higher she was also made for herself.” Reid focuses on reasons why women should not be limited only by domesticity and that taking care of household and children should be in interest of both, the wife as well as the husband.
Many female writers and feminists argued that what they needed was recognition of what women need to fulfil their potential and their own natures and not only equality. Virginia Woolf, in probably the most notable pages of A Room of One’s Own, states her argument about how women’s talents have been wasted. Walters supports Woolf’s argument and comments on it: “She contemplates a number of greatly talented women from the past, from the Duchess of Newcastle to George Eliot and Charlotte Brontë – who were deprived of experience, intercourse and travel and that is the reason they never wrote quite as powerfully and generously as they might have.
Woolf also reasoned that a woman need money and a room of her own to be able to write.”
Nevertheless, it was not sooner than in the second half of the 19th century when organized campaigns, clubs and movements for women’s rights emerged in order to improve female condition in terms of education, opportunities to work outside their households, reform in laws affecting married women and, for the first time, for the right to vote. One of the first female groups was called the Ladies of Langham Palace, the name comes from their meeting place, and the movement was led by Barbara Leigh Smith. The group initiated many campaigns around issues that had already been clearly defined, for instance “women’s urgent need for better education and for increased possibilities of employment, as well as the improvement of the legal position of married women.” In her pamphlets Leigh Smith also discussed the problem of marriage settlements, since to that time woman would lose all her property as soon as she got married.
The activism focused primarily on gaining political power, particularly the right of women’s suffrage towards the very end of the 19th century. In Britain the Suffragettes and, possibly more effectively, the Suffragists campaigned for the women’s vote. The suffrage was seen important not only as an acceptance of women in society but also for improving women’s lives. Throughout the end of the 19th century there were many attempts to pass suffrage for women, although the parliament never passed it arguing if women had much influence in Parliament, it would lead, as Walters suggests, to “hasty alliances with scheming neighbours, more class cries, permissive legislation, domestic perplexities and sentimental grievances.” Even though suffragettes did not achieve many victories during the end of the 19th and the beginning of the 20th centuries they remained persistent.
The greatest figures of British suffragettes were the Pankhurst family, Emily Davison or Emily Davies. Emily Davies contributed to female education, she believed women should get the same education as men, and she managed to form a committee to further the prospects of women taking the University Local Examinations, which was established in late 1850s. In 1878 Queen’s and Bedford Colleges began awarding degrees to women, and 30 years later women at Oxford also became full members of the universities. The Pankhurst family played a major role in the suffragette movement, the leader of British suffragettes, Emmeline Pankhurst, was very politically radical and she is considered to be one of the most influential women in the British history. Also, the Pankhursts established the Women’s Social and Political Union (WSPU). The WSPU effectively and most radically fought for the vote and as Christabel Pankhurst once remarked: “It is unendurable to think of another generation of women wasting their lives for the vote. We must not lose any more time. We must act.” Even though, initially, the WSPU was meant to be only a family organization the shift of the group was gradual, from provoking the politicians to mass marches and demonstrations in Hyde Park. Finally, in 1918 the Representation of the People Act was passed granting the vote to women over the age of 30 who owned houses, and in 1928 the right was extended to all women over the age of 21. Women could finally sit in the parliament
after the World War I, although not many of them were elected, as late as in 1840s there were only 12 of them. However, women had been actively serving on school boards and other local bodies since the 1870s, and their numbers increased after the war.
The second wave of feminism emerged after the World War II and can be described as the women’s liberation movement, which focused on gaining legal and social equality for women, and most importantly on ending discrimination. This period was also understood as a continuation of the first wave of feminism, in fact, the term ‘first wave’ was coined after the second wave emerged. Since the second wave had slightly different goal it needed a new term. Second wave feminists saw women’s cultural and political inequalities as “inextricably linked and encouraged women to understand aspects of their personal lives as deeply politicized and as reflecting sexist power structures.” One of the most influential feminists of the early 20th century was Simone de Beauvoir, who is also the author of The Second Sex and of the very famous statement “one is not born, but rather becomes, a woman.” De Beauvoir distinguishes sex from gender and suggests that gender is “an aspect of identity gradually acquired. She states that gender is the cultural meaning and form that body acquires, the variable modes of that body’s acculturation.”
Women still attempted to communicate better social position in society and the feminist movements of this period defined its demands for equal education opportunity and equal pay, as well as free contraception and abortion if needed. The distinction from the first wave movement was that the groups were now much smaller, and the women were focusing on discussing particular issues, sharing their experiences and discovering what they have in common as women. Not only the things listed above were topics of discussion, rape played also significant role in the second wave feminism, and even today.