The Pink Patriarchy Podcast

Fourth-Wave Feminism, Power, Platforms, and the Fight Over What Comes Next

7 min · 12 de mar de 2026
Portada del episodio Fourth-Wave Feminism, Power, Platforms, and the Fight Over What Comes Next

Descripción

Fourth-wave feminism didn’t arrive quietly. It emerged loudly, online, and mid-crisis - shaped by social media, economic instability, racial reckoning, and a growing refusal to pretend that representation alone equals justice. Emerging in the early 2010s, this wave is defined less by a single ideology than by its tools and terrain. Digital platforms became the organizing space. Hashtags became rallying cries. And long-ignored forms of harm - sexual violence, state violence, economic precarity - were suddenly impossible to look away from. If earlier waves argued over who women are, fourth-wave feminism returned to a harder question: who holds power, who is harmed by it, and how that harm is enforced. In theory, this was a correction. In practice, it’s where things get messy.

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Portada del episodio NOW is Having their Annual Conference Next Weekend

NOW is Having their Annual Conference Next Weekend

What Sex Workers Want Feminists at NOW to Know As feminists gather for the National Organization for Women conference, sex workers have something important to say: We are not asking feminism to abandon survivors. We are not asking anyone to ignore trafficking. We are not asking anyone to pretend exploitation does not exist. We are asking feminists to stop building policy about us without us. For too long, sex workers have been discussed in feminist spaces as symbols, cautionary tales, evidence of patriarchy, or objects of rescue. We have been spoken about as if we are all the same. We have been used to justify laws, policing strategies, and organizational positions that too often make our lives more dangerous. And when we have tried to speak for ourselves, we have too often been dismissed as exceptions, manipulated victims, privileged outliers, or inconvenient evidence. That has to change. Sex workers are workers, parents, organizers, survivors, disabled people, migrants, queer and trans people, formerly incarcerated people, poor people, students, caregivers, artists, advocates, and community members. Some of us entered the sex trade by choice. Some entered through poverty, coercion, homelessness, addiction, family rejection, immigration barriers, criminal records, or lack of better options. Many of us have complex stories that do not fit neatly into anyone’s political slogan. But one thing is clear: we deserve safety, dignity, autonomy, and human rights.

Ayer18 min