TY - JOUR
T1 - Intellectuals debate #MeToo in China
T2 - Legitimizing feminist activism, challenging gendered myths, and reclaiming feminism
AU - Ling, Qi
AU - Liao, Sara
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2020 Oxford University Press. All rights reserved.
PY - 2021
Y1 - 2021
N2 - This study focuses on the intellectual debate over #MeToo in China provoked by an article written by a well-known Chinese scholar and public intellectual Liu Yu. Raising such countervailing issues as women's supposed complicity in sexual harassment and the drawbacks of digital activism in comparison with legal action, Liu's article marked a crucial moment in the public awareness and discussion of #MeToo and digital activism in China in 2018. By analyzing the critical responses to Liu's argumentations, we examined the discursive impact of these critical efforts to destabilize Liu's hegemonic reading of the sexual harassment culture in China. We show how Liu's critics offered a compelling defense of #MeToo, deconstructed enduring gendered myths, and had a significant impact in terms of reclaiming feminism in China. We argue further that the critics' intellectual and deliberative efforts exemplify China's local struggles in the global #MeToo movement and feminist activism.
AB - This study focuses on the intellectual debate over #MeToo in China provoked by an article written by a well-known Chinese scholar and public intellectual Liu Yu. Raising such countervailing issues as women's supposed complicity in sexual harassment and the drawbacks of digital activism in comparison with legal action, Liu's article marked a crucial moment in the public awareness and discussion of #MeToo and digital activism in China in 2018. By analyzing the critical responses to Liu's argumentations, we examined the discursive impact of these critical efforts to destabilize Liu's hegemonic reading of the sexual harassment culture in China. We show how Liu's critics offered a compelling defense of #MeToo, deconstructed enduring gendered myths, and had a significant impact in terms of reclaiming feminism in China. We argue further that the critics' intellectual and deliberative efforts exemplify China's local struggles in the global #MeToo movement and feminist activism.
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U2 - 10.1093/JOC/JQAA033
DO - 10.1093/JOC/JQAA033
M3 - Review article
AN - SCOPUS:85100963273
SN - 0021-9916
VL - 70
SP - 895
EP - 916
JO - Journal of Communication
JF - Journal of Communication
IS - 6
ER -