While a great deal of research has been carried out over the last thirty years on the history of feminism and its various manifestations, we are now witnessing, since the 2000s, a revitalisation of feminist activism with the advent of a new generation of great heterogeneity, in terms of discourse, repertoires of action and identities. We are thus witnessing a renewal of the culture of protest, which is reflected in the internationalisation of women’s activist strategies and in the consolidation of alternative feminist solidarity networks, as witnessed by the Iranian demonstrations. This militant effervescence leads us today to a focus on feminist activism through the prism of four Kurdish women.