Name |
DOB |
Country |
Activism |
Mary Wollstonecraft |
1759-1797 |
England |
An English writer and feminist philosopher who raised her voice for gender equality. Her 1792 work 'A Vindication of the Rights of Women' questiones Rousseau's ideas of female inferiority and acquired a prominent status in feminist literature. |
Amelia Jenks Bloomer |
1818-1894 |
United States |
She was a relentless crusader for women's rights. Despite lacking much of a formal education, she excelled in writing and teaching. She used to write articles on women's rights in her husband's newspaper, and ater went on to start her own newspaper, named The Lily. It focused solely on women's issues. |
Simone de Beauvoir |
1908-1986 |
France |
French philosopher and eriter Simone de Beauvoir (1908-1986) was a major figure in modern feminism, who untiringly criticized the patriarchal system. In 1949, she authored "The Second Sex," in which she showed how men had consistently denied women's identity, drawing on history, art and psychology |
Alice Paul |
1885-1977 |
United States |
An American women's rights activist. While in studying in Engaland. she became active in the suffragist movement there, and it as arrested and imprisoned for numerous times. She was an active member of the national American Woman Suffrage Association but later left it to establish the Congressional Union for Woman Suffrage in 1913, which played a major role in winning the women the right to vote. |
Elizabeth Stanton |
1815-1902 |
United States |
One of the prominent figures in the early feminist movement in America. She was a friend of Susan B. Anthony, with whom she co-authored History of Woman Suffrage. At the first women's rights convention at Seneca Falls in 1848, Stanton conceived the Declaration of Sentiments, which went on to be one of the seminal texts in the women's rights movement. |