Changing Forms and Platforms of Misogyny: Sexual Harassment of Women Journalists on Twitter

Changing Forms and Platforms of Misogyny: Sexual Harassment of Women Journalists on Twitter

 

RICHARD REGO
St Joseph’s College (Autonomous), India

Media Watch 9 (3) 437-446, 2018
DOI: 10.15655/mw/2018/v9i3/49480
Across time, in a variety of forms and spaces -from homes and workplaces to digital domains of social media- women have become victims of male dominance. So also are the other vulnerable sections that suffer multi-layered abuse, and endure sexual harassment in social media. Yet, this phenomenon is insufficiently explored. Therefore, this article argues that social media spaces have become domains for sexual harassment and subjugation of women. This article examines gender-trolling on Twitter as a form of sexual violence against women. Employing qualitative analyses of the Twitter conversations on Indian journalists, namely Barkha Dutt, Sagarika Ghose, and Rana Ayyub, it exposes the nature and form of sexual violence against women on the micro-blogging space, and argues that social media platforms constitute convenient havens of harassment against assertive women