Category
page 1Russian feminists

Anton Chekhov
Russian dramatist and author (1860–1904)
Mikhail Bakunin
Russian revolutionary anarchist and philosopher (1814–1876)
Alexandra Kollontai
Soviet diplomat (1872-1952)
Kseniya Sobchak
Russian television personality and politician

Manizha
Manizha Dalerovna Sangin (; ; ; born 8 July 1991), known mononymously as Manizha, is a Russian-Tajik singer and songwriter, as well as a Goodwill Ambassador for the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees. Beginning her career in 2003 as a child singer, Manizha went on to perform with the music groups Ru.Kola, Assai, and Krip De Shin, before later pursuing a solo career. She represented Russia in the Eurovision Song Contest 2021 with the song "Russian Woman".
Nadya Tolokonnikova
Russian political activist and musician
Aleksandra Skochilenko
Russian artist
Maria Arbatova
Russian and Soviet writer, politician and feminist
Maria Alyokhina
Russian political activist and musician
Yekaterina Samutsevich
Russian musician
Lena Hades
Russian painter
Daria Serenko
Russian feminist
Yulia Tsvetkova
Russian feminist activist
Konkordiya Samoilova
Russian Bolshevichka

Anna Yevreinova
Russian writer and feminist, editor (1844–1917)
Oksana Grigorieva
Russian pianist and singer-songwriter
Alevtina Fedulova
Russian politician
nixelpixel
Nika Wodwood (; born October 20, 1993, Protvino, Moscow Oblast), better known as nixelpixel, is a Russian intersectional feminist and cyber activist who maintains her video blog on YouTube. The most famous feminist in Russia, according to the publication Meduza.
Oksana Vasyakina
Russian poet
Tatiana Nikonova
Russian feminist activist and sex blogger
Anna Kalmanovich
Russian writer, feminist and suffragist
Tatiana Goricheva
Russian theologian and feminist
Karina Istomina
Russian DJ and blogger

Anna Alchuk
Russian painter, poet and author (1955-2008)

Diana Burkot
musical artist
Natalia Malakhovskaia
Russian writer

Olga Lipovskaya
Russian poet and feminist (1954-2021)
Alexandra Mitroshina
Russian blogger
Yana Zavatskaya
Russian-German science fiction writer, poet, and translator (born 1970)
Nadia Plungian
Russian art historian, feminist