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Quarterly Essay 84: The Reckoning

How #MeToo Is Changing Australia

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Quarterly Essay 84: The Reckoning

By: Jess Hill
Narrated by: Jess Hill
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In 2021, Australia saw rage and revelation as #MeToo powered an insurgency against sexism and sexual violence. From once isolated survivors to political staffers, women everywhere were refusing to keep men’s secrets.

In this electrifying essay, Jess Hill traces the conditions that gave birth to #MeToo and tells the stories of women who – often at great personal cost – found themselves at the centre of this movement. Hill exposes the networks of backlash against them – in government, media, schools and in our national psyche. This is a powerful essay about shame, secrecy and, most of all, a revolutionary movement for accountability.

“Here’s what men like Scott Morrison don’t understand: political spin has no power against the rage unleashed by #MeToo. At its heart, this is an accountability movement.... The cultural revolution of #MeToo is not just about sexual violence. It is taking aim at patriarchy’s most sacred compact: the keeping of men’s secrets.” Jess Hill, The Reckoning

Jess Hill is an investigative journalist and the author of See What You Made Me Do and the Quarterly Essay The Reckoning. She has been a producer for ABC Radio and journalist for Background Briefing and Middle East correspondent for The Global Mail. Her reporting on domestic abuse has won two Walkley awards, an Amnesty International award and three Our Watch awards. See What You Made Me Do won the 2020 Stella Prize and the ABA Booksellers’ Choice Adult Non-Fiction Book of the Year.

©2021 Jess Hill (P)2021 Audible Australia Pty Ltd.
Australia & Oceania Gender Studies Oceania Sexual Abuse & Harassment Women in Politics Heartfelt Nonfiction Rage
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Me too from down under

"Quarterly Essay" is an Australian publication that began in 2001 whereby an author, who is typically a journalist from one of the serious newspapers, picks an issue that is relevant and topical and writes an extended, book length article on their chosen subject.
Investigative journalist Jess Hill was chosen to write the December 2021 essay which is on the Me Too movement in which she describes the beginnings in 2017 as "like the Berlin Wall coming down" and allowed women to talk openly and freely about their experiences and are no longer silenced into self blame. Misogynists such as Weinstein and Trump may well have re-ignited the feminist movements into action; Jess Hill also contemplates how it may also have resulted in a schism between individual and social feminists.
It takes a village to protect an abuser and we hear tales ranging from celebrities to an existential threat to high ranking federal government officials. Whilst some of the stories of the people who are the focus of this essay will be lost on non Australian listeners the message is clear and shocking to anyone listening to this audio book.

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