. Betty Friedan
Behind their husbands.
Barbara Christian has written: 'Black feminist criticism' -- subject(s): Theory, History and criticism, American literature, Feminism and literature, African American authors, Intellectual life, African American women, African American women in literature, African Americans in literature, Women authors, Feminist literary criticism, Women and literature
No. Not all women's movements are feminist. There are actually a handful of anti-feminist women's movements right now, who argue that the feminist movement has been detrimental to women, families, and society.
Susan B. Anthony
Jeredith Merrin has written: 'An enabling humility' -- subject(s): American Feminist poetry, American poetry, Criticism and interpretation, Feminism and literature, Feminist poetry, American, History, History and criticism, Influence (Literary, artistic, etc.), Women and literature, Women authors
NOW
Tatiana Teslenko has written: 'Feminist utopian novels of the 1970s' -- subject(s): American Feminist fiction, American fiction, Criticism and interpretation, Feminism and literature, History, History and criticism, Utopias in literature, Women and literature, Women authors
Ellen McCracken has written: 'Decoding Women's Magazines' -- subject(s): Women's periodicals, American, Themes, motives, Illustrations, Popular culture, Magazine illustration, Women consumers 'New Latina narrative' -- subject(s): American Feminist fiction, American fiction, Ethnicity in literature, Feminism and literature, Feminist fiction, American, Hispanic American authors, Hispanic American women, Hispanic American women in literature, History, History and criticism, Intellectual life, Narration (Rhetoric), Postmodernism (Literature), Women and literature, Women authors
Jeannette Batz Cooperman has written: 'The broom closet' -- subject(s): American Domestic fiction, American Feminist fiction, American fiction, Domestic fiction, American, Family in literature, Feminism and literature, Feminist fiction, American, History, History and criticism, Housekeeping in literature, Housewives in literature, Marriage in literature, Married women in literature, Women and literature, Women authors
Technically, all you have to do is identify as a feminist. At worst, you'd be a bad feminist (as opposed to not a real feminist) because feminism is a movement, not an organisation. To be a good feminist, you'd have to engage in women's rights advocacy or women's rights activism.
An American social reformer and feminist who played a pivotal role in the women's suffrage movement.
She was an American Quaker minister, abolitionist, social reformer and proponent of women's rights. She is credited as the first American "feminist" in the early 1800s but was, more accurately, the initiator of women's political advocacy.