As you may or may not know, I'm something of a fan of the radical feminist Sheila Jeffreys. Anyway, I ran across a podcast interview with her not long ago that I thought was worth sharing as sort of food for thought.
In the podcast, Jeffreys critiques the factors that have led to the current place of the women's movement: the popularization of identity politics, "intersectionality", the replacement of Women's Studies with "Gender Studies", the popularization of the term "gender", etc. In her view, the women's movement ceased to exist as a women's movement sometime around the mid-1980s and the shift away from female-centered feminism can be traced to the popularization of neoliberal ideology around the start of the 1980s and the restructuring of Western universities to function like business corporations.
An insight I found to be particularly dead-on was her commentary on intersectional theory, which she argues has collapsed interest in the women's movement among younger women by promoting infighting; a feat achieved by prioritizing the differences among women rather than prioritizing our shared interests as an entire class.