This book approaches the topic of feminism from an Afrocentric perspective. It critically re-reads the Showalterian trilogy and proposes a race-centered periodization of the entire feminist struggle. He thus reveals a partitioning of the memorial resonance of feminist ideology oriented towards the racial lever. This will contribute to the partitioning of the said ideology into two great moments, thus dressing feminism in an ideological-racial cloak. The first moment, the hybris feminism, is tri-partitioned differently and renamed. The second moment, decolonial feminism, is defined and theorized, on the one hand. On the other hand, it highlights maternalism, as well as some of the theories behind it. It attempts to define this neologism created to designate this anti-hegemonic movement born in Africa within the broader framework of de-colonialism. It rethinks, by tropicalizing, some of the theories echoed in decolonial thought, in line with the anti-supremacist wave of feminism underway at the global level. Thus, this book reshuffles the cards of feminism, and proposes to Africa a poetics that takes into account thecultural element.