Zhou Xiaoxuan Explained

Zhou Xiaoxuan
Birth Place:Wuhan
Known For:Role in Chinese Me Too movement
Occupation:screenwriter, activist

Zhou Xiaoxuan (; born), better known by her pen name Xianzi, is a Chinese screenwriter and leading advocate in the Chinese Me Too movement.[1] [2]

Biography

Zhou Xiaoxuan was born in Wuhan in circa 1993. She moved to Beijing when was 18 years old to study screenwriting. Zhou writes essays under the pen name Xianzi.

Sexual assault allegations

In 2018, Zhou wrote an essay that was widely spread on social media. In it and a more detailed sequel, Zhou alleged that as an intern in 2014, she met with Zhu Jun, a Chinese television host, in the hope of getting an interview, but he forcibly kissed and groped her for about 50 minutes in his dressing room. She told the BBC that although they were interrupted several times by workers going in and out of the room, she was frozen with fear and shame and could not alert them. The day after, she reported the incident to the police.[3] Zhou later joined the

  1. MeToo
movement and sued Zhu for a public apology and 50,000 yuan ($7,400) in damages. Zhu has denied all allegations and countersued Zhou for defamation. In September 2021, a Chinese court rejected her accusations against Zhu on the grounds of "insufficient evidence."[4] [5] Meanwhile, she has faced criticism from nationalist bloggers, and a commentary in the Global Times claimed that the MeToo movement was being used by "Western forces to tear Chinese society apart".[6] [7] On 10 August 2022, a court in Beijing rejected an appeal by Zhou after a closed-door hearing, citing as reason that the evidence submitted had been "insufficient". Afterwards, Zhou said that her legal team would focus on getting more evidence and footage that had not been included during the trial. A small group of her supporters showed up on the day of the ruling. Zhu Jun, however, has been absent from the proceedings, and Zhou has not heard of any further developments in his defamation suit against her. She told The Guardian that she was "very disappointed" but hoped that her loss "could provoke more reflection on the real difficulty of being a woman in today’s China."[8]

She was recognized as one of the BBC 100 Women in December 2022.[9]

Notes and References

  1. News: Hernández. Javier C.. 2019-01-04. She's on a #MeToo Mission in China, Battling Censors and Lawsuits. en-US. The New York Times. 2021-09-28. 0362-4331.
  2. May 12, 2021. How a Sexual-Harassment Suit May Test the Reach of #MeToo in China. September 28, 2021. The New Yorker.
  3. Web site: Xianzi: The #MeToo icon China is trying to silence . Feng . Zhaoyin . Wong . Tessa . September 27, 2021 . BBC . September 29, 2021 .
  4. Web site: Analysis by Nectar Gan and Steve George. Analysis: The face of China's #MeToo movement loses her legal battle, but vows to appeal. 2021-09-28. CNN.
  5. Web site: 2021-09-14. Court rules against woman who became face of China's #MeToo movement. 2021-09-28. the Guardian. en.
  6. News: Buckley. Chris. Chen. Elsie. 2021-09-15. China #MeToo Figure Vows to Appeal After Losing Landmark Case. en-US. The New York Times. 2021-09-28. 0362-4331.
  7. 2018-10-10. One Year of #MeToo: How the Movement Eludes Government Surveillance in China. 2021-09-28. The New Yorker. en-US.
  8. Web site: Woman at centre of China #MeToo case vows not to give up after appeal rejected. Vincent. Ni. The Guardian. 2022-08-10. 2022-08-10.
  9. Web site: BBC 100 Women 2022: Who is on the list this year? . 2022-12-10 . BBC News . en-GB.