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#NiUnaMenos
#Aufschrei
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Before #MeToo became a massive global movement, these were the hashtags that represented activists from Ukraine to Peru who demanded accountability for the sexual violence and racism, xenophobia, and misogyny inflicted on women, transgender people, and girls. Led by activists such as Tarana Burke, who popularized the phrase "me too," these movements provided a call to action for survivors across the world to speak out about their experiences.

In #MeToo and Beyond, M. Cristina Alcalde and Paula-Irene Villa bring together scholars and activists from various backgrounds to approach #MeToo from multiple spaces, positionalities, and areas of expertise, many from regions and contexts often overlooked and understudied in the mediascapes of the global North. This volume includes perspectives from around the world and touches on diverse topics spanning masculinity studies, transgender people's heightened risk of suffering sexual harassment and violence, the internal conflict in American Jewish communities as activists began speaking out against prominent members who relied on shared cultural values to shame their victims, as well as many other significant aspects of the first all-inclusive international effort to end gender-based violence. The editors and contributors heed Burke's call to amplify marginalized voices so that instead of becoming footnotes, these voices guide activists to frame polyphony as central to understanding past, current, and future forms of gender-based violence and resistance.

The goal of #MeToo and Beyond is to examine both profoundly universal and specific experiences of sexual violence, as well as the collective effort to stop gender-based violence wherever it occurs. Activists and scholars will find this book an important and necessary contribution to current and future discussions on sexual violence and global movements.

Table of Contents

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  1. Cover
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  1. Half-title page, Title page, Copyright page
  2. pp. i-iv
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  1. Contents
  2. pp. v-vi
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  1. Introduction: Disrupting the Familiar, Approaching #MeToo
  2. M. Cristina Alcalde and Paula-Irene Villa
  3. pp. 1-18
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  1. Part I. The Politics of Inclusion, Space, and Change
  1. 1. #MeToo and the Future of Feminist Antiviolence Activism in Australia
  2. Rachel Loney-Howes
  3. pp. 21-45
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  1. 2. Tackling Gender-Based Violence in South Africa: Organizing, Calling Out, Embracing #MeToo
  2. Kammila Naidoo and Denise Buiten
  3. pp. 46-66
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  1. 3. Changing Men and Masculinities in the United Kingdom and Beyond in the Wake of #MeToo
  2. Stephen R. Burrell
  3. pp. 67-90
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  1. Part II. Law, Media, and Feminist Mobilization
  1. 4. In Singular and Plural Voice: #MeToo, Law, and Solidarity
  2. Srimati Basu
  3. pp. 93-111
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  1. 5. The Language of #MeToo in South African and North American Media Discourses
  2. Desiree Lewis
  3. pp. 112-126
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  1. Part III. Higher Ed and the Disruption of Everyday Violence and Exclusions
  1. 6. #GamAni: How #MeToo Inspired the American Jewish Community to Look Inward . . . and Where the Human Family Goes from Here
  2. Keren R. McGinity
  3. pp. 129-145
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  1. 7. Intimacy, Transgression, Ethics: Scripts and Silences in Gendered Academia
  2. Rukmini Sen
  3. pp. 146-162
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  1. 8. Queering #MeToo: Working toward Queer and Trans Inclusion
  2. Xavier L. Guadalupe-Diaz and Elizabeth Whalley
  3. pp. 163-180
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  1. Part IV. Tensions and Conflicts Within #Metoo
  1. 9. On Being Public: Feminism, Sexual Harassment, and the Question of Palestine
  2. Ruth Preser
  3. pp. 183-200
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  1. 10. NiUnaMenos: Beyond the Rally, a Field in Dispute
  2. Fanni Muñoz Cabrejo
  3. pp. 201-219
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  1. Afterword: #MeToo, Just a Hashtag?
  2. Paula-Irene Villa and M. Cristina Alcalde
  3. pp. 220-224
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  1. Acknowledgments
  2. pp. 225-226
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  1. List of Contributors
  2. pp. 227-232
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  1. Index
  2. pp. 233-242
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