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#Me(n)Too? 对遭受性侵害的男性和女性幸存者的在线社会支持。

#Me(n)Too? Online Social Support Toward Male and Female Survivors of Sexual Victimization.

机构信息

Ariel University, Israel.

出版信息

J Interpers Violence. 2021 Dec;36(23-24):NP13541-NP13563. doi: 10.1177/0886260520905095. Epub 2020 Mar 5.

Abstract

Much has been written about the difficulty of sexual victimization survivors to disclose their experiences to others and about the crucial role social support play in their recovery process. However, the vast majority of the literature has focused on face-to-face interactions, while in recent years, more and more victims are turning to online self-disclosure, whether privately or as part of proactive network protests such as the #MeToo hashtag campaign. The few existing studies that examined online responses to disclosures of sexual victimization have focused on female survivors only and didn't examine whether men and women elicit different responses based on gender stereotypes. The current study addresses this lacuna through a quantitative content analysis of 2,635 responses to 734 self-disclosures of male and female survivors of sexual victimization published on Facebook and Twitter during the first 3 weeks of the #MeToo and #WhyIDidntReport protests in Israel (October 2017 and October 2018, respectively). The findings indicate that social networks, despite some of their affordances, such as lack of eye contact or physical gestures, are supportive environments for survivors of sexual victimization of both sexes. However, women who self-disclose online are more likely to receive emotional support and network support, whereas men are more likely to receive retributive support-a new support type that was found in the current study. The conclusion is that users' reactions to sexual victimization disclosures are mainly supportive but are also affected by gender stereotypes. Practical and theoretical implications are discussed.

摘要

关于性侵犯幸存者向他人披露自己经历的困难,以及社会支持在他们的康复过程中所扮演的关键角色,已经有很多文献进行了探讨。然而,绝大多数文献都集中在面对面的互动上,而近年来,越来越多的受害者开始选择在网上进行自我披露,无论是私下进行,还是作为积极网络抗议的一部分,例如#MeToo 话题标签运动。少数研究在线回应性侵犯披露的现有研究仅关注女性幸存者,并未研究男性和女性是否根据性别刻板印象产生不同的反应。本研究通过对 2017 年 10 月和 2018 年 10 月以色列 #MeToo 和 #WhyIDidntReport 抗议活动期间,在 Facebook 和 Twitter 上发布的 734 名男性和女性性侵犯幸存者的 734 份自我披露进行的定量内容分析,填补了这一空白。研究结果表明,尽管社交网络具有一些优势,例如缺乏眼神接触或身体手势,但它们是两性性侵犯幸存者的支持性环境。然而,在线自我披露的女性更有可能获得情感支持和网络支持,而男性更有可能获得报复性支持——这是本研究中发现的一种新的支持类型。结论是,用户对性侵犯披露的反应主要是支持性的,但也受到性别刻板印象的影响。讨论了实际和理论上的影响。

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