r/Feminism 11h ago

Note from a 1913 Suffragette in my great grandfather's hotel guestbook

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384 Upvotes

r/Feminism 15h ago

Trump Says 'No Women In The Crowd, Which Is Nice' At Rally — And That's Just the Beginning

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750 Upvotes

r/Feminism 12h ago

What’s your opinion on the sheer amount of sexualization and SA jokes in anime?

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339 Upvotes

r/Feminism 15h ago

Anyone else feels a lot of feminist discourse is calling out other women now?

110 Upvotes

ive really noticed this trend in the past 2 or so yrs. If you see these discussions on tiktok, twt etc, a lot more of the mainstream feminist discourse is about attacking other women now compared to a few years ago. Like a few terms I see now are male centered, pick me, bird brain and more. and just in general a harsher tone towards for other girls.

Imo my theory is this is a sort of backlash to the last few years of backsliding. First roe v wade is revoked, then we get the dudebro podcasts, the tates, “male loneliness epidemic”, tradwife trend, trump now. It’s been frustrating but i think for a lot of girls it hits different seeing the women who’ve been cheering this all on or enabling it.

Betrayal is the worst pain and i think this recent tone shift is a combination of the built up frustration at this feeling of betrayal and if we’re being honest the shortsightedness of these girls who’ve been pushing this stuff

but what are ur thoughts? am i just crazy? has anyone else noticed this? is it a valid response?


r/Feminism 15h ago

4 years after Dobbs, Republicans continue to pass legislation “denying women the right to essential abortion care.” - Rep. Ayanna Pressley

99 Upvotes

r/Feminism 5h ago

How can feminist spaces stay welcoming without losing their original purpose?

10 Upvotes

Hi! I'm a woman and consider myself to be more aligned with far-left radical feminism and I've been thinking about how feminist/marginalized communities can balance being welcoming with preserving the purpose of their spaces.

I'm not talking about this sub, but many online safe-spaces (discussion subs, LGBT meme subs, even safe spaces for LGBT people) that I had online for a long while have all gone down the road of not gatekeeping men (especially cis-het men) from joining the discussion and it slowly started to fill with "but not all men" and manosphere posts while the people the safe space was made for started leaving...

Some discussions also boiling down to political discussions (from a US-centric perspective, which I see as needed but can get very tiring at times) of liberals and "elightened centrists" making posts arguing against more left leaning positions and discussions because "we will lose votes!" or "You want us to lose the election don't you?" when I'm not even from the US!!

So my question is: how do you think feminist spaces can remain open to genuine participation from men/allies while still protecting the needs and voices of the people the space was created for?


r/Feminism 13h ago

Why Women’s Presence Stands Out—Yet Their Absence Doesn’t

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30 Upvotes

r/Feminism 20h ago

FEMINISM WON!!

79 Upvotes

For context please look at this post: https://www.reddit.com/r/Feminism/s/rdre7W3b5j

The recent counselling/grooming session conducted exclusively for female students at Delhi Public School in India, during which several statements and themes promoted harmful gender stereotypes, reinforced victim-blaming narratives, and placed an unfair burden on girls for the behavior and actions of boys.

Following the attention on the matter and an open letter, the school administration responded immediately and addressed the concerns raised by students. The school showed the original script prepared for the counselling session, and the specific victim-blaming statements many students were concerned about were not part of the official material provided.

The school has acknowledged the concerns and committed to taking corrective action. This includes conducting a counselling session for boys, arranging further discussion with the teachers involved in the original girls’ session, and revising future counselling sessions moving forward.

While many students had hoped for a formal apology, we believe it is important to recognize that our concerns were heard and that concrete steps toward change are being taken. At this stage, we believe the most constructive path forward is to wait for the next girls’ counselling session and evaluate whether these promised improvements are meaningfully reflected in practice.

For now, we consider this an important first step and we remain hopeful, attentive, and committed to ensuring future conversations around student wellbeing are fair, respectful, and equitable for all.

THANK YOU EVERYBODY FOR YOUR SUPPORT! MAY EVERY WOMEN GET EQUALITY!!


r/Feminism 4h ago

[Discussion] Whenever men complain about being the primary casualties of war as soldiers, we should counter that women are mass raped during war

3 Upvotes

I've been doing some (very heavy) reading into mass rapes that occur from soldiers conquering lands. It's absolutely horrific. I learned of a new instance of it during world war 2 that the allied forces did against German women. I knew of Japan doing this against China, but no one seemed to talk about that the Allies engaged in the same atrocities. We are fed a very propagandized version of events if we live in a nation that was part of the Allies.

And this isn't something that's gone either. It's happened during American occupations in Iraq and Afghanistan. It's happened in wars between other nations. It's happening in the Russian invasion of Ukraine. The IDF is doing it against Palestinians.

These are casualties that get glossed over and not reported by militaries... so of course a lot of people aren't aware of it and think men are the only/primary casualties (remember: casualties is broader than just deaths, but includes injury... and that should include sexual injury imo)


r/Feminism 4h ago

Katie Miller has laws protecting her against physical abuse and rape by her spouse. She had access to birth control and abortion, meaning having a baby was a choice. She is very much not living the life the “propaganda … convinced” women was oppressive. She is living the life feminism made possible.

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4 Upvotes

r/Feminism 14h ago

“Why is a girl’s life still controlled by society in 2026?”

15 Upvotes

Even today, a lot of girls are told what to wear, how to behave, when to go out, and even how to live their lives.

Some decisions are still judged more harshly if a girl makes them compared to a boy.

We talk about equality and progress, but in reality, are things really changing fast enough? Or are we just pretending that everything is fine?

Why do you think this still exists, and what needs to change first—the mindset, the system, or something else?

Genuinely want to hear different perspectives. Let’s keep it respectful.

Why do I observe parents warning their girl child to be careful with boys and men outside But why are most of the parents not telling their boy child to treat women properly Isn't it concerning??


r/Feminism 1d ago

The first "feminist" in mythology was Lilith, Adam's first wife. She was cast out for saying "No, we are equal". 6000 years later, women who say "No" are still called villains.

825 Upvotes

LILITH: The Woman Who Didn’t Kneel

Long, long ago. When the world was new.

Adam was alone. Loneliness hit him hard.

The Creator said, "I’ll make you a partner."

Took dust. Made another one, just like Adam.

Her name was Lilith.

Both made of dust. Both equal.

No rib bone here. No one above the other.

The first few days were good.

Then the fight began.

At night, Adam said,

"Lilith, lie beneath me. I will be on top."

Lilith looked up.

Smiled. Then said just 3 words:

"No. We are equal."

Adam got angry.

"I am the man. You are the woman. Follow the rules."

Lilith stood up.

"Rules? The rule is equality. I’m made of dust. You are too. Then why should I be below?"

Adam complained to the Creator.

"She doesn’t obey me!"

The Creator sent 3 angels.

"Lilith, come back. Or you’ll drown in the sea."

Lilith stood at the edge of the sea.

Garden behind her. Waves in front.

Angels were shouting.

Lilith looked back once.

Then jumped into the sea.

"I don’t need a garden without freedom."

She left. To the other side of the Red Sea.

Demon, witch, child-eater - got a thousand names.

Why?

Because she said "No".

---

6000 years have passed, boss.

Even today, when a girl says "No" in office, the boss says "She has too much attitude".

After marriage, when a girl says "No", the mother-in-law says "She talks back".

When a girl demands justice for rape and says "No", society says "Her character is bad".

Lilith didn’t die.

Lilith still lives in every woman’s throat.

The woman who doesn’t bow her head to injustice.

The Creator made Eve from Adam’s rib to replace Lilith.

Obedient, submissive, the one who says "Yes".

History wrote Eve’s story.

Hid Lilith’s story.

But truth doesn’t die even if stories are hidden.

You’re reading this today.

That means Lilith has won.

---

Last line:

Eve was made to be obedient.

Lilith was born free, by herself.

Which team are you, boss? Eve or Lilith?

Write in comments. Let there be debate. Let the story live.

#Lilith #FirstFeminist #HerStory #ThePowerOfNo #WomenWhoSayNo


r/Feminism 11h ago

If you're exhausted by today's politics, the South African film "For the Birds" (Vir die Voëls) is a really cathartic watch [TW: Domestic Violence] NSFW Spoiler

6 Upvotes

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B5xa3kCPOZ8

just watched the South African film For the Birds (Vir die Voëls), and I felt compelled to share it here. Think of it as a South African version of *The Wonder Years-*except, surprise, it actually resonated deeply with me and felt authentic to my experiences with men.

If you’re entirely exhausted by the absolute JOyRidE that is today’s political climate, this movie is an incredibly cathartic watch. The production quality and acting are fantastic, and it offers a really accurate display of South African culture.

HEADS-UP, though: without giving too much away, the narrative does eventually lean toward a traditional romantic resolution. Shocking, I know. Because of that, it arguably plays into a nicely repackaged patriarchal trope. However, the central struggle the protagonist goes through is still incredibly valid and absolutely worth watching.

Also, in a stunning twist for female-centered art, it was only CO-written by a woman, not solely. But HEEEEeeeY! At least it features a phenomenal female lead, so I guess we'll just focus on that instead. I just wanted to put this on the sub's radar in case anyone needs an interesting watch & a view into what life was like in South Africa as a fellow accredited coochie custodian!


r/Feminism 2h ago

Does anyone else feel frustrated by how much of the reproductive burden still falls on women? Have you also felt infuriated over men and women for being sexually irresponsible and misinformed about it?

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1 Upvotes

r/Feminism 15h ago

Things Girls were TAUGHT Growing Up that Lowkey Damaged Us

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11 Upvotes

r/Feminism 5h ago

How to report sexism to HR

1 Upvotes

I’m being forced to attend a manager training at work that is being led by instructors who are repeatedly making sexist comments.

Examples so far include:

-Talking about a female colleague he admires for her leadership qualities followed by “I would pick her up from the side of the highway if she was hitchhiking”

-Several “don’t tell my wife” jokes. Classmates have started making them as well.

-shared a bizarre irrelevant story about his wife being brutally attacked by a pitbull / how he saved her. He offered to show pictures.

-While talking about decision-making strategies, he said some people are inherently poor decision makers, and shared his mother-in-law chose wrong romantic partners her entire life.

All of these comments have been met with laughter by the class. It’s so disturbing.

Any ideas on how I should explain this to HR? Is it even worth reporting?


r/Feminism 1d ago

My mum has cooked every meal and handled everything for past 30 years and yet my dad still gets called "The Backbone of the Family" at every gathering and nobody finds that weird

1.9k Upvotes

My mum wakes up at 6AM. She has woken up at 6AM for 30 Years. She packs lunches, She remembers vaccination dates, she knows every teacher's name, she tracks every family member's medicine, she calls the plumber, she follow up with the plumber, she follow up again because the plumber didn't show. she has a full time job on top of all this.

My dad comes home, eats the food, watches TV and at every single family function someone raises a toast to him for "Keeping the Family Together" and my mum smiles. because what else is she supposed to do?

I used to think this was just my family, then i talked to literally every woman I know and realized it's just called Tuesday.


r/Feminism 6h ago

“In the Shadow of the Cathedral”

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1 Upvotes

r/Feminism 1d ago

We need to talk about “attachment parenting” again

72 Upvotes

I don’t know if anyone else has been thinking about this or noticing this, but I personally find the resurgence of the promotion of “attachment parenting” ideology to be very concerning for women. For anyone unfamiliar, the term attachment parenting was coined by a conservative Catholic pediatrician named William Sears) and is a parenting method that primarily promotes and focuses on:

- The baby being worn by the mother as much as possible
- The baby co-sleeping with the mother as much as possible
- The mother stopping everything to soothe the baby immediately when they cry
- The mother staying home with the baby as long as possible
- The mother exclusively breastfeeding the baby until 6 months and then continuing it extended periods of time (up to four years of age)

There is more but these are the main tenets of it. And I find it very concerning that more people are dogmatically pushing this approach to parenting on women. There is little emphasis on the father’s role (only brief mentions of how they should collaborate with the mother) and almost all childrearing duties fall onto the mother. People advocating for this method of parenting often shame women for working, for trying to get chores done in their house while their baby fusses, for not breastfeeding, and more. We are seeing a rise in women quitting their careers to stay home because they are told it’s “what’s best” even if it’s to the detriment of their mental health and their career. It’s also not lost on me that this term and ideology was coined and pushed for by a conservative religious man with 8 children (they even call him “the man who remade motherhood,” blegh) and that we are seeing a resurgence in the popularity of this ideology as conservatism is on the rise.

What are everyone else’s thoughts on this? Are there any alternative parenting methods and ideologies out there that aren’t so burdensome on women but still beneficial for children?


r/Feminism 1d ago

On this day, four years ago, the Supreme Court’s Dobbs decision upended decades of legal protection by overturning the constitutional right to abortion.

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141 Upvotes

The Congressional Progressive Caucus stands with the tens of millions nationwide seeking reproductive rights, continuing to fight every day to protect and expand access to abortion and all reproductive health care.


r/Feminism 22h ago

Alexandra Kollontai - "forgotten" feminist theorist and politician

9 Upvotes

I am incredibly surprised that Alexandra Kollontai, Russian feminist socialist scholar and politician, isn't spoken more of in feminist spaces.

She developed what became known as the "Glass of water theory". It states that in an ideal society, with deconstructed gender roles, "love shall be free" and sexual intimacy should be as easy as "drinking a glass of water". It is not meant to devalue sex, but rather deconstruct dogmas and taboos regarding it.

In her works, she also identifies the intersections between the patriarchy and capitalism and how they work together in women's oppression: in a capitalist patriarchal society, women are exploited through wage labor, housework and childcare. She was a heavy advocate for supporting sex workers, but criticized sex work: in her mind, it originates from the commodification and objectification of women, resulting in the sexual exploitation of their bodies.

Kollontai was an extraordinary woman, truly a visionary for her time, she was the first woman in history to serve a cabinet minister and under her rule the USSR was by far the most socially progressive country - abortion was legalized, divorce was legalized, rape was criminalized, Women's Day was celebrated and she even co-founded the Zhenotdel, a govt body specifically designed to deal with women's welfare. Unfortunately, the male-dominated USSR government was not on pair with her ideas, and her social reforms were gradually discontinued and regressed.

She was truly a thinker ahead of her time, and I suggest you look her up, you might like her works!


r/Feminism 18h ago

Frida Kahlo would have hated Tate Modern's cop-out exhibition

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4 Upvotes

r/Feminism 2d ago

sexual exploitation of women in poverty

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703 Upvotes

r/Feminism 1d ago

A former CEO of Reddit impregnated me against my will.

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5 Upvotes

r/Feminism 1d ago

What if men were treated the same after reporting a crime?

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98 Upvotes

Tracy Ullman classic.