Feminism, in its numerous facets and perspectives, is reputed as one of the more powerful and changing social movements of the twentieth century.And if we no longer refer to feminism in the singular because we question the contradictory definitions of the universal man and woman, if we questions the standards (heterosexuals, binaries, etc), if we incorporate the concept of gender and recognize people separated by a wide range of inequalities (for example, race, ethnicity, social class and others), it is also thanks to these movements that we are able to place ourselves in other poles.These poles reclaim other equal worlds, but also demand other knowledge, using new epistemologies which are no longer based under the auspices of the Western, white, heterosexual man.In contrast with these epistemologies and values that naturalize inequalities, the field of Gender Studies has developed studies that