English to Spanish Dictionary feminist

feminist

feminista
definition
noun
What are we as British feminists doing to support the right of all women to freedom from violence?
a person who supports feminism.
adjective
feminist literature
of, relating to, or supporting feminism.
translation of 'feminist'
noun
feminista
adjective
feminista
example
Something else is going on, as a number of 'feminist' scholars have indicated.
Some write 'feminist' theology, take a stand and publicly speak out, not mincing words.
This collection of essays brings together a number of major 'feminist' critics of early modern literature.
His greatest affair was with the mathematician and pioneering 'feminist' Emilie du Chatelet.
She was in a car with a male friend and his new girlfriend, a moderately well-known 'feminist' theorist.
I am still learning about this, so I am not an authority on 'feminist' intellectualism.
She was part of the early 'feminist' movement and I had no idea what feminism was.
Wilkinson does not argue that focus groups or indeed any method can be described as inherently 'feminist' .
Jones says he was a bit puzzled by 'feminist' critics who took the film to task for being misogynist.
The process was given a moral purpose by the language of the 'feminist' movement.
She introduced me to a lot of 'feminist' theory that I never really thought about until then.
In it, she examined the kinds of arguments heard to support and attack 'feminist' positions.
A few women gave explicitly 'feminist' reasons for going to university.
Where can 'feminist' activism lead us to in our quest for a more gender-democratic society?
She is currently completing a book chapter on 'feminist' theory and cyberculture.
Her women are not 'feminist' case studies but microcosms of the complex rules and regulations that govern such states.
Many women today, we are assured by 'feminist' commentators, are choosing not to get married.
Already, 'feminist' art history has moved on, sceptical of the way that artistic fame depends on biography.
Like many contemporary 'feminist' thinkers, Winterson is alive to the power of fairy tales.
Modern 'feminists' don't want to trade in their femininity for drab power suits and a brief case.
The personal is political all right - but not quite in the way 'feminists' once thought.
It is also assumed that the only possible reaction 'feminists' can have to nationalism is rejection.
The reaction to that on the part of male and female 'feminists' is to stop thinking.
The other aspect to note is that it appears the goals of 'feminists' on both sides of the globe are the same.
In more recent years, there has been a softening of the attitudes of 'feminists' towards quantitative research.
Melanie points out that today's 'feminists' are still grappling with the questions of the nineteenth century.
The second part of that equation seems to have been abandoned by 'feminists' early on.
The first protests by 'feminists' were against how the nationalists defined the role of women.
What are we as British 'feminists' doing to support the right of all women to freedom from violence?
It is a festival that 'feminists' would love to strike out completely from the history of a nation.
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