Me Too Movement: Me Too; the voice raised for victims
Volume III, Issue II, 2020
Most women around the world have experienced sexual harassment, assault, and violence, or have at times been driven right into a zone where they knew it did not feel right. They have skilled the “same” moment, and yet for every of them it has been a exceptional second. For a few it become an “aha” moment; for a few the pain, emotional and physical, may additionally have been unbearable, lasting for days, months, or years. For others still, this moment needed to be deeply buried. It could not be spoken about due to its cultural and political context; it became identifiable but stripped of the strength that comes from naming. This moment of articulation and recognition can be shaped via girls’ age, sexual orientation, trans status, race, ethnicity, socioeconomic position, religion, by way of broader cultural practices, and by means of a remarkable many different formative experiences, gift and past.