The formation and the unique development of British feminist literature differs with its facts and features. Early progress of Europe influenced the British literature. The emergence of literature facilitated women writers to say a literary word about their rights. Actually, these writers brought gender discrimination, women captivity, violation and other problems of women to literature. So, they founded feminism movement. Feminist writers take an important place during the development of feminism. These writers emerged in every period of time. Such as, in the XIV century French writers Christine de Pizan and Olympe de Gouges, in the XVIII century British writers Margaret Cavendish and Mary Wollstonecraft, in the XIX century Elizabeth Gaskell and in the XX century Doris Lessing, Margaret Drabble and other writers wrote the manifest of feminist literature with their feminist theme works. But till the XIX century the word of "feminism" had not been existed and early feminist writers had not been famous under the name of feminism. The word "feminism" was created in France by French philosopher Charles Fourier and the first used in Paris Conference in 1892.