Full Text Available

Note: Clicking the button above will open the full text document at the original institutional repository in a new window.

A Framing Analysis of #MeToo YouTube-based News Coverage in BRICS: Media Censorship, State-controlled Channels & the Obstruction of Online Feminist Activism in China, Russia and Brazil

This comparative study investigates the media representation of YouTube-based news about the #MeToo campaign, feminism, and sexual harassment accounts in three BRICS nations: China, Russia and Brazil. The situation of women in the Global South was at the centre of discussions during the 2018 BRICS s...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Hoareau, Charlotte
Other Authors: Ntunja, Tando
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Centre for Film and Media Studies 2022
Subjects:
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1867613140464697344
access_status_str Open Access
author Hoareau, Charlotte
author2 Ntunja, Tando
author_browse Hoareau, Charlotte
Ntunja, Tando
author_facet Ntunja, Tando
Hoareau, Charlotte
author_sort Hoareau, Charlotte
collection Thesis
description This comparative study investigates the media representation of YouTube-based news about the #MeToo campaign, feminism, and sexual harassment accounts in three BRICS nations: China, Russia and Brazil. The situation of women in the Global South was at the centre of discussions during the 2018 BRICS summit. While their security remains a persistent issue, officials declared that women should not feel unsafe while participating in economic activity. Although the bloc flagged gender disparities as a significant concern, media outlets perceive Russia, Brazil and China's responses to sexism and gender-based violence as inadequate. Various mechanisms also compromise activism for women's rights. This research focuses on the YouTube representation of conditions which gave rise to the campaign and the process of #MeToo in BRICS. This study considers the level of inclusion of women in economic activity, the procedures established for their safety as well as the extent of media freedom, including tools available for feminist advocacy. In addition to revealing gaps in depiction and proposing solutions for improved media framing, this research is significant because the role and repercussions of this viral campaign must be comprehended better in BRICS economies. Academics focused mainly on the impact of the movement in the West. However, the innovative feminist trend rapidly spread to non-western nations that are dominant emerging economies, showing the gravity of sexual harassment and gender disparities globally. Furthermore, the extent to which #MeToo had influenced localised iterations of anti-assault movements in these emerging countries suggests that the BRICS became sites where sexual abuse and gender inequalities unfold singularly in comparison to other nations. The study presents findings from primary research done on the BRICS, this online social movement #MeToo and related gender dynamics issues. After a presentation of the selected study design, the research provides results from a content analysis of thirty YouTube news reports (October 2017-March 2019).
format Thesis
id oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/35810
institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:31:24.573Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2022
publishDateRange 2022
publishDateSort 2022
publisher Centre for Film and Media Studies
publisherStr Centre for Film and Media Studies
record_format dspace
source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/35810 A Framing Analysis of #MeToo YouTube-based News Coverage in BRICS: Media Censorship, State-controlled Channels & the Obstruction of Online Feminist Activism in China, Russia and Brazil Hoareau, Charlotte Ntunja, Tando YouTube media framing agenda-setting #MeToo sexual harassment hashtag feminism China Russia Brazil BRICS media censorship state-owned channels patriarchy economy This comparative study investigates the media representation of YouTube-based news about the #MeToo campaign, feminism, and sexual harassment accounts in three BRICS nations: China, Russia and Brazil. The situation of women in the Global South was at the centre of discussions during the 2018 BRICS summit. While their security remains a persistent issue, officials declared that women should not feel unsafe while participating in economic activity. Although the bloc flagged gender disparities as a significant concern, media outlets perceive Russia, Brazil and China's responses to sexism and gender-based violence as inadequate. Various mechanisms also compromise activism for women's rights. This research focuses on the YouTube representation of conditions which gave rise to the campaign and the process of #MeToo in BRICS. This study considers the level of inclusion of women in economic activity, the procedures established for their safety as well as the extent of media freedom, including tools available for feminist advocacy. In addition to revealing gaps in depiction and proposing solutions for improved media framing, this research is significant because the role and repercussions of this viral campaign must be comprehended better in BRICS economies. Academics focused mainly on the impact of the movement in the West. However, the innovative feminist trend rapidly spread to non-western nations that are dominant emerging economies, showing the gravity of sexual harassment and gender disparities globally. Furthermore, the extent to which #MeToo had influenced localised iterations of anti-assault movements in these emerging countries suggests that the BRICS became sites where sexual abuse and gender inequalities unfold singularly in comparison to other nations. The study presents findings from primary research done on the BRICS, this online social movement #MeToo and related gender dynamics issues. After a presentation of the selected study design, the research provides results from a content analysis of thirty YouTube news reports (October 2017-March 2019). 2022-02-22T04:31:44Z 2022-02-22T04:31:44Z 2021 2022-02-16T06:32:51Z Master Thesis Masters M.A. http://hdl.handle.net/11427/35810 eng application/pdf Centre for Film and Media Studies Faculty of Humanities
spellingShingle YouTube
media framing
agenda-setting
#MeToo
sexual harassment
hashtag feminism
China
Russia
Brazil
BRICS
media censorship
state-owned channels
patriarchy
economy
Hoareau, Charlotte
A Framing Analysis of #MeToo YouTube-based News Coverage in BRICS: Media Censorship, State-controlled Channels & the Obstruction of Online Feminist Activism in China, Russia and Brazil
thesis_degree_str Master's
title A Framing Analysis of #MeToo YouTube-based News Coverage in BRICS: Media Censorship, State-controlled Channels & the Obstruction of Online Feminist Activism in China, Russia and Brazil
title_full A Framing Analysis of #MeToo YouTube-based News Coverage in BRICS: Media Censorship, State-controlled Channels & the Obstruction of Online Feminist Activism in China, Russia and Brazil
title_fullStr A Framing Analysis of #MeToo YouTube-based News Coverage in BRICS: Media Censorship, State-controlled Channels & the Obstruction of Online Feminist Activism in China, Russia and Brazil
title_full_unstemmed A Framing Analysis of #MeToo YouTube-based News Coverage in BRICS: Media Censorship, State-controlled Channels & the Obstruction of Online Feminist Activism in China, Russia and Brazil
title_short A Framing Analysis of #MeToo YouTube-based News Coverage in BRICS: Media Censorship, State-controlled Channels & the Obstruction of Online Feminist Activism in China, Russia and Brazil
title_sort framing analysis of metoo youtube based news coverage in brics media censorship state controlled channels amp the obstruction of online feminist activism in china russia and brazil
topic YouTube
media framing
agenda-setting
#MeToo
sexual harassment
hashtag feminism
China
Russia
Brazil
BRICS
media censorship
state-owned channels
patriarchy
economy
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/35810
work_keys_str_mv AT hoareaucharlotte aframinganalysisofmetooyoutubebasednewscoverageinbricsmediacensorshipstatecontrolledchannelsamptheobstructionofonlinefeministactivisminchinarussiaandbrazil
AT hoareaucharlotte framinganalysisofmetooyoutubebasednewscoverageinbricsmediacensorshipstatecontrolledchannelsamptheobstructionofonlinefeministactivisminchinarussiaandbrazil