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Here to be Heard : Digital feminist engagement with #MeTooinChina

Zheng, Lu LU (2019) MKVM13 20191
Media and Communication Studies
Abstract
This study analyses Chinese people's engagement in #MeTooinChina against sexual assault and patriarchal norms in Chinese society by asking three main research questions: 1) Why and how do Chinese people engage with #MeTooinChina? 2) What challenges are they faced with in their engagement and how do these challenges influence their continuous engagement with #MeTooinChina? 3) How do they reflect on their engagement and evaluate the outcomes of #MeTooinChina?

Theoretically the thesis draws on research into digital social movements, in particular in relation to feminist movements, as well as theories on the network society and how social media is used for political engagement. The notion of political engagement as based in emotions and... (More)
This study analyses Chinese people's engagement in #MeTooinChina against sexual assault and patriarchal norms in Chinese society by asking three main research questions: 1) Why and how do Chinese people engage with #MeTooinChina? 2) What challenges are they faced with in their engagement and how do these challenges influence their continuous engagement with #MeTooinChina? 3) How do they reflect on their engagement and evaluate the outcomes of #MeTooinChina?

Theoretically the thesis draws on research into digital social movements, in particular in relation to feminist movements, as well as theories on the network society and how social media is used for political engagement. The notion of political engagement as based in emotions and affects is discussed in particular.

The analysis shows that the interviewees have a range of motivations as to why they engaged, from affective impulses to discontent with the system. The use of new media technologies has also promoted new modes of engagement and the various practices that they have performed are built on their previous skills and communicative competence like law, IT, sex education, and journalism. The interviewees stories also expose the overwhelming pressure of the world's most sophisticated system for censoring of the media. The black-box logic and unpredictability nature of the censorship creates mental pressure for the participants of #MeTooinChina which results in internalized censoring and disengagement among the interviewees. As a resistance to the harsh censorship, the participants of #MeTooinChina have however also adapted and reinvented media technologies to prevent their voice and engagement from being erased from the Internet, for example, building online archives of #MeTooinChina so that the incidents and articles that emerged in the movement can kept being updated and saved forever online. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
Zheng, Lu LU
supervisor
organization
course
MKVM13 20191
year
type
H2 - Master's Degree (Two Years)
subject
keywords
feminist engagement in China, civic agency, civic engagement, #MeTooinChina, online political engagement, censorship, digital feminist activism, networked social movement, women’s rights movement in China
language
English
id
8986485
date added to LUP
2019-06-25 14:20:35
date last changed
2019-06-25 14:20:35
@misc{8986485,
  abstract     = {{This study analyses Chinese people's engagement in #MeTooinChina against sexual assault and patriarchal norms in Chinese society by asking three main research questions: 1) Why and how do Chinese people engage with #MeTooinChina? 2) What challenges are they faced with in their engagement and how do these challenges influence their continuous engagement with #MeTooinChina? 3) How do they reflect on their engagement and evaluate the outcomes of #MeTooinChina? 

Theoretically the thesis draws on research into digital social movements, in particular in relation to feminist movements, as well as theories on the network society and how social media is used for political engagement. The notion of political engagement as based in emotions and affects is discussed in particular. 

The analysis shows that the interviewees have a range of motivations as to why they engaged, from affective impulses to discontent with the system. The use of new media technologies has also promoted new modes of engagement and the various practices that they have performed are built on their previous skills and communicative competence like law, IT, sex education, and journalism. The interviewees stories also expose the overwhelming pressure of the world's most sophisticated system for censoring of the media. The black-box logic and unpredictability nature of the censorship creates mental pressure for the participants of #MeTooinChina which results in internalized censoring and disengagement among the interviewees. As a resistance to the harsh censorship, the participants of #MeTooinChina have however also adapted and reinvented media technologies to prevent their voice and engagement from being erased from the Internet, for example, building online archives of #MeTooinChina so that the incidents and articles that emerged in the movement can kept being updated and saved forever online.}},
  author       = {{Zheng, Lu}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  note         = {{Student Paper}},
  title        = {{Here to be Heard : Digital feminist engagement with #MeTooinChina}},
  year         = {{2019}},
}