Otago Daily Times

Not a #MeToo moment

Disney’s sacking of the contrite James Gunn plays into the hands of people with unpleasant agendas, writes Sonia Sodha.

- Sonia Sodha is an Observer columnist

SINCE it started trending on social media 10 months ago, two things have come to define the #MeToo moment. One is the powerful public testimony of women and men who have experience­d sexual harassment and abuse in settings from Hollywood to Westminste­r. The second is the occasional sacking — or bringing down — of the powerful wrongdoer.

For men such as Harvey Weinstein, that loss of status and privilege could not have come soon enough, but the rolling of some other heads has created a sense of unease. Most recently, Disney’s sacking of James Gunn, the director of the Guardians of

the Galaxy film franchise, for a series of deeply offensive jokes about rape and paedophili­a, has prompted a wave of sympathy. Several of the films’ stars have written an open letter calling for him to be reinstated.

Like many, I worried that what would stymie the power of #MeToo would be a cultural backlash against those speaking out. But the Gunn case illustrate­s a different threat looming: people with other agendas jumping on the bandwagon.

There are a number of reasons why his sacking sits uneasily. There’s no question his jokes were offensive, but they were made between 2009 and 2011. There are signs Gunn has honestly reflected since: in 2012, he issued a profuse apology through LGBTQ organisati­on Glaad for a homophobic post made the previous year. He apologised to Disney.

There’s also a sense of the company throwing him to the dogs at the first opportunit­y. His jokes were in the public domain; Disney must have been aware of his track record. So why did it summarily dismiss him within 24 hours of the tweets being republicis­ed?

Although his sacking may vaguely resemble a #MeToo moment, it was no such thing. It was not preceded by statements from women who worked with him; it was confected by ‘‘alt-Right’’ blogger Mark Cernovich, one of several unsavoury figures who have pledged to go after highprofil­e Trump opponents in revenge for ABC’s sacking of Trumpsuppo­rting Roseanne Barr after she posted a racist tweet .

For the far Right, ‘‘piling on’’ kills two birds with one stone. It delivers their enemies’ heads on a plate while at the same time invoking inevitable comparison­s with #MeToo, delegitimi­sing a movement that is antithetic­al to the far Right.

But Disney has also got something to answer for. Its sacking of Gunn was purely about corporate reputation management.

If the company genuinely cared about the objectives of #MeToo, it might have not hired him in the first place. Or it might have reflected on the casual sexism some saw in the first two

Guardians films. Or it might have spoken to Gunn before hiring him and verified that he really did regret his old jokes and then stood by him.

‘‘There is little due process in the court of public opinion,’’ the signatorie­s of the letter to Disney wrote. They’re right. But #MeToo took off in the way it did because due process has failed women for decades.

The stories that have emerged from BBC Newsnight’s investigat­ion into bullying in the British parliament shows what happens when victims tried to raise their treatment through due process: it was they who suffered the consequenc­es, not the bullies. Women do not want to reveal their harassment in the media, not least because of the further abuse it attracts; just look at the

Daily Mail’s hatchet job on Kate Maltby, who raised what she regarded as Damian Green’s inappropri­ate conduct last year.

But while a lack of due process might be the inevitable consequenc­e of #MeToo, it has never been about securing heads on a platter. There is a risk summary dismissals end up being counterpro­ductive to the longerterm cultural and behavioura­l change feminists want to see.

Yes, Weinstein’s a monster, but he is also the product of a society that enables him by failing to call out lowlevel harassment. You’ll never root out the Weinsteins by sacking them after the fact. If #MeToo’s results stop and start with sackings, people are let off the hook for the much deeper cultural change needed — allowing them to pass the buck for abusive behaviour in which they are complicit. Nor is a sacking necessaril­y the appropriat­e response to something such as an offensive joke; far more meaningful would be an apology, reflection and a commitment to reform.

Disney, like the far Right, is guilty of underminin­g #MeToo. Its sacking of Gunn sets a worrying precedent for companies, perhaps making them think twice about employing people who have said bad things, even when they have apologised and reformed. Do we really want to live in a world where people can’t apologise, atone and find redemption?

So the big challenge for supporters of #MeToo is how we allow the movement to mature beyond its headsonapl­ate moment. The Gunn sacking shows a culture warsstyle backlash is not the only threat. #MeToo’s reliance on the court of public opinion is built into its very DNA and it is not only a strength but a weakness that those with their own agendas — whether multibilli­onpound media corporatio­ns or farRight bloggers — stand ready to exploit.

 ?? PHOTO: WIKIMEDIA COMMONS ?? James Gunn.
PHOTO: WIKIMEDIA COMMONS James Gunn.

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