Jennifer Lawrence opened up about feminism, her much-heralded essay on the gender wage gap in Hollywood, and her belief that society should create a “new normal” body type in a wide-ranging interview in April’s Harper’s Bazaar. “I don’t know why that word (feminism) is so scary to people. It shouldn’t be, because it just means equality,” the 25-year-old Hunger Games actress told the magazine. “If we are moving forward in a society, you are feeling stronger as a woman, and you want to be taken more seriously. You don’t have to take away the wonderful traits that come with being a woman.” “We are sensitive. We are pleasers. We’re empathetic,” Lawrence added. “All those things that can keep you from asking for what you want or making mistakes.” Lawrence, who earned a Best Actress Oscar for 2012’s Silver Linings Playbook and has been nominated for the award three other times, has quickly become one of the most politically-outspoken actresses in Hollywood. She is also one of the richest, topping Forbes magazine’s list of the highest-paid actresses in 2015 with $52 million in earnings. The actress said she was “embarrassed to be from Kentucky” after Christian county clerk Kim Davis was jailed for refusing