The first wave of feminism began during the nineteenth and early twentieth century. Feminists were fighting for women’s right to vote. This first wave of feminism involved a wide range of women who were more moderate and conservative rather than revolutionary or radical. These women fought for their rights, but they did it with in the law. They were willing to work within the political system and they knew the purpose of this movement wasn’t to start wars or disrupt the social roles they were given. The reason these women pushed so hard for this movement was to achieve their goal of achieving a more equal social role to men. In 1860, New York helped out feminists by passing a revised Married Woman’s Property Act, which gave women shared ownership of their children, allowing them to have a say in their children’s wills, wages, and granting them the right to inherit any property they wish to give their children. As this first wave continued, of course advances and setbacks were made within New York and other states. Thankfully, with each new win the feminists used them as ways to advance and prove that it was time for change and …show more content…
By the late 1800’s it was time for the third wave to take over. In this movement, or wave, the feminist would focus less on laws and the political process and more on individual identity. This third wave started in a world with punk rock music, in this wave the feminist may have been the most diverse and self-reliant feminist wave to date. The Third Wave is more nebulous, it started to redefining the way they are looked upon making it known that everyone and anyone could be a feminist but it seems to me to be more about expanding and questioning received notions of gender and gender roles. With the many laws that had made, the third movement focused less on laws and a little more on individual