Current references:  Zahay, Megan L. “What “Real” Women Want: Alt-Right Feminini

Current references: 
Zahay, Megan L. “What “Real” Women Want: Alt-Right Femininity Vlogs As an Anti-Feminist Populist Aesthetic.” Media and Communication, vol. 10, no. 4, 2022, pp. 170-179, https://doi.org/doi.org/10.17645/mac.v10i4.5726.
Mattheis, Ashley. “#Trad Culture: Reproducing Whiteness and Neo-Fascism through Gendered Discourse Online.” Routledge Handbook of Critical Studies in Whiteness, 2023, pp. 91-101, https://doi.org/10.4324/9780429355769-7.
Sykes, S M. “Tradwives: The Influencers of Right-Wing Extremism.” Massey Research Online, mro.massey.ac.nz/items/1470459b-3d83-4f73-8781-37bad4cfd868.
Current working outline: 
1. Introduction
2. Historical Context (emergence of the movement and influence)
3. Ideology (beliefs and values, intersection with far-right ideology, role of social media)
4. Societal Impact (influence on gender and feminism, implications on women’s autonomy and empowerment)
5. Conclusion
Current working thesis:
The #Tradwife movement has emerged as a cultural phenomenon that spans much further than traditional gender roles. This movement, which glorifies submission, domesticity, and the return to traditional values, continues to spark debates about the intersection of gender, political beliefs, and extremist ideology. As the #Tradwife movement continues to gain traction, it becomes crucial to dissect its evolution, ideology, and societal impacts.