From the antislavery and women’s rights movements of the 19th century, continuing through the black and women’s rights movements of the 1960s and 1970s, up to today’s contemporary black feminist activism, African American women have sought to have a voice in two centuries of liberation struggles that had silenced them. Whether one chooses to use the term “African American feminism,” “black feminism,” “womanism,” or “black American feminism,” to articulate the complexity of African American women’s demand for social, economic and political equality , understanding is the desire for a compatible and progressive vision of social justice based on the historical and ongoing pursue against the race and gender oppression African American women have experienced at home, at work, in their communities and, moreover, within the struggle culture as a whole. As they have become cognizant of the multiple systemic forces of oppression, they have dominant collective actions for social change, transforming society and themselves through their own agency and self-determination.