The first wave of the feminist movement lasted from the late 19th century until 1920 when the fundamental goal was equal rights and the right to vote. The second wave of feminism focused more on female sexuality, the family, contesting the social and economic role of women, and many groups meant to empower women to embrace their identities and fight for social and economic equality with men
At the point when feminism rights initially took hold in America and Europe, centered around women's suffrage, stressing on the ways in which women were mentally equivalent to men to justify equal rights. These "First-Wave" women's feminist, as they were later called when another, more radical age of women's activists emerged, more readily worked within the existing patriarchal social and political system to enact legislation that reformed various aspects of public life, such as higher education and the workplace.They accomplished various administrative victories, most outstandingly the nineteenth Amendment, which allowed women the right to vote. Second-wave women's feminist needed to address disparity in the family structure, the working environment, and what they felt as specifically related issues of conception rights and sexuality. …show more content…
They were similar because they both focused on getting women the same rights as men and they were different because I believe the second wave became more personal and more women were fighting for