Demographic Representation and Collective Storytelling in the Me Too Twitter Hashtag Activism Movement
Aaron Mueller, Zach Wood-Doughty, Silvio Amir, Mark Dredze, Alicia L., Nobles

TL;DR
This study analyzes over 600,000 tweets from the #MeToo movement to reveal demographic disparities, narrative differences, and the role of intersecting identities in shaping collective storytelling and activism on Twitter.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis of demographic representation and narrative variation in #MeToo Twitter conversations, highlighting underrepresented voices and their influence.
Findings
White women tweets are overrepresented compared to other demographics.
Black women often expressed emotional support and critiqued justice system treatment.
Different demographics emphasized distinct themes like harassment, violence, and political issues.
Abstract
The #MeToo movement on Twitter has drawn attention to the pervasive nature of sexual harassment and violence. While #MeToo has been praised for providing support for self-disclosures of harassment or violence and shifting societal response, it has also been criticized for exemplifying how women of color have been discounted for their historical contributions to and excluded from feminist movements. Through an analysis of over 600,000 tweets from over 256,000 unique users, we examine online #MeToo conversations across gender and racial/ethnic identities and the topics that each demographic emphasized. We found that tweets authored by white women were overrepresented in the movement compared to other demographics, aligning with criticism of unequal representation. We found that intersected identities contributed differing narratives to frame the movement, co-opted the movement to raise…
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