After reading Chandra Mohanty’s article Under Western’s Eyes: Feminist Scholarship and Colonial Discourses, I find myself agreeing with many of her points that she’d emphasized throughout the article. The most important one for me was that feminism should not be universalized because not all feminism is the same. As each country progressed, they all face different problems and one should not assume that every country all faced that problem. In the article, Mohanty stated that “the assumption of women as an already constituted, coherent group with identical interests and desires, regardless of class, ethnic, or racial location or contradictions, implies a notion of gender or sexual difference or even patriarchy which can be applied universally and cross-culturally,” which had left a strong impression on me. I think that such assumption should exist because, in a way, it does place a limit on what we labeled as “third world women.” Western feminists looked to women from “third world countries” as the subjects of oppression and needing help without fully understand their culture, background, and where they came from.