In this article, we draw on insights on contemporary feminist activism and explore practices of challenging previously dominating notions of rape in legal processes. We have analyzed interviews and recorded interrogations from ten rape cases, using thematic qualitative analysis. The results are presented in four sections representing the main themes identified through the analysis: lacking faith in the legal system, coproducing feminism through support, reporting the rape as a feminist act, and doing resistance in court. The analysis shows that both in the interviews with the complainants and in the court hearings, a feminist discourse centering around a critique of previously hegemonic notions about rape, as well as expressions of a feminist solidarity, was evident. We suggest that acts of everyday feminism are crucial for this kind of feminist discourse to come about in legal processes related to rape.