That's first wave. Waves after that shunned for not choosing the "right" choice.
you clearly have no clue what feminist history is or what the waves are. so ill give you a simplified version
First wave - late 19th century -1914/ 1918-1930 - fights for votes for women, the right for women to have an education including universities, the right for women to work as doctors.
Second wave - 1959 - 1982 - fight for women to work and have the same rights of men, fighting against sexist tropes like beauty standards, fights for worker rights such as maturity leave, equal pay, the removal of sacking women for being pregnant or married, contraceptive, reproductive and abortion rights. by modern standards classed as a middle class white woman's movement
Womanism - 1970s-1980s - a fight back against white feminism/ second wave, about black women's rights and civil rights.
Third wave - 1982 - 2015 - Intersectional feminism, feminism that includes, black women, lesbian/bi women, focus on LGBT rights, focus on disability rights, girl power. intersectionality is the acknowledgement of how different parts of a persons life can effect discrimination. for example a black woman will experience prejudice due to her colour and her sex separately, a disabled white woman will experience sexism and ableism, a gay asian man will experience, racism and homophobia ect.
Fourth wave - 2015 - cont - focus on trans rights, gay rights and victimisation. mostly marxist, however does have fascist tendencies.
resurgence of second wave - 2019 -2020 - feminists who are feeling fourth wave and third wave has left them behind or have become to extreme have reverted back to the principles of second wave, not anti trans rights just anti erasure of women, fights to end trans radicals changing the definitions of sex and gender.
Focus's exclusively on womens rights only.