Feminist criticism began in the 1960s as a product of second-wave feminism and focused on exposing the patriarchal ideology and stereotypical representations of women in literature written by men. It aimed to show how these works emphasized masculine dominance and inferior portrayals of women characters. In later decades, feminist criticism shifted to discovering neglected works written by women and evaluating literary representations of women against social realities. There are differences between Anglo-American feminist criticism, which emphasizes close reading of texts, and French feminism, which incorporates more post-structuralist and psychoanalytic approaches.