Liberal feminism, socialist feminism and Marxist feminism; we do not come up with obvious approaches like the radical and cultural feminisms. These concepts of feminism have developed theories to remove the problems in the fields such as labor, political-social equality of rights. Because the woman has a position that does not even have the right to vote yet (as Wollstonecraft says) her husband is a prostitute. …show more content…
Socialist Feminism
It combines Marxist feminist theory with radical feminist theory that centers on gender. In this context, besides the class in the oppression of women, it also includes social sex and sexuality. The feminist bourgeois movement defends gender equality by emphasizing "the difference of women" in the capitalist and patriarchal order of the 19th and early 20th centuries. It does not address the problems of women workers and does not support women's full social human liberation struggles.
The Socialist Women's Movement …show more content…
But Marxist feminists; liberal feminism and radical feminism think that they ignore class differences among women. Because, according to Marxist feminists, although women are exposed to similar repression caused by their sexual characteristics, bodies and fertility, the class, racial, ethnic and socioeconomic differences between women create inequality among women themselves. A white bourgeois woman and a black slave woman never had equal rights and would not see the same