Technically, all you have to do is identify as a feminist. At worst, you'd be a bad feminist (as opposed to not a real feminist) because feminism is a movement, not an organisation. To be a good feminist, you'd have to engage in women's rights advocacy or women's rights activism.
It had undertones of Lesbianism and helped women to transition away from an oppressive patriarchy to Lesbianism.
The feminist movement is still current, so women want now what they have always wanted: equality. Feminism seeks to give women equal footing socially and economically to men.
Working in the abolitionist movement gave women a sense of political aspirations. As a result, women became more concerned about the feminist movement.
Several unfair reasons still exist that were not solved by the feminist movement. One of the most egregious is the disparity in pay between men and women.
The right of women to hold membership in the AFL
Feminism is the movement that supports gender equality. To be a feminist is thus to be someone who thinks that men and women should be equal socially and economically.
It didn’t. Women went back to the house and raising children after the war. It will be 40 years before there is a women’s movement.
The book affected the feminist movement because Betty Friedan raised the question - "Is that all?" It made women question their expectations of what being a woman meant. Before the 2nd wave of feminism a woman was meant to be happy with being a wife and mother, a carer, a nurturer, a homemaker. Some women rejected her ideas but others thought there must be more than this and they wanted gender equality. Betty Friedan was a leader of the feminist movement which advocated for equal pay, childcare, maternity leave and numerous other agendas. In essence the feminist movement of the 1960's is generally marked by the publication of her book, the woman was a catalyst. So, yes it really did affect the feminist movement.
It depends on what you regard as the "feminist movement". Some would consider that fighting for women's rights was a precursor to the main feminist movement of the 1970s. If this is the case, then the feminist movement arguably began with Dame Roma Mitchell whose influence led to the formation of the Women Law Students' Society, when she was not permitted to join the Law Students' Society because she was a woman. On 23 September 1965, Mitchell was made a Justice of the Supreme Court of South Australia in 1965, the first Australian woman to achieve this position. Pioneering the Australian women's rights movement, Mitchell was also the first woman in Australia to be a Queen's Counsel (1962).
"Women's peace army" does not compute. Women's Liberationist Movement (nick-named "Women's Lib" for short/or the "Feminist Movement") allied themselves with the civil rights movement, etc.
They advocated for women to work outside the home in a paid job.