Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective

Josephine Ho

Taiwanese academic and feminist From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Josephine Ho
Remove ads

Josephine Chuen-juei Ho (Chinese: 何春蕤; born 16 June 1951) is a Taiwanese educator and academic. She is the chair of the English department of the National Central University, Taiwan, and coordinator of its Center For the Study of Sexualities.[1][2] She is one of the most prominent feminist scholars in Taiwan.[3]

Quick Facts Born, Nationality ...
Quick Facts Traditional Chinese, Simplified Chinese ...
Remove ads

Education

Ho earned a Bachelor of Arts (B.A.) degree from National Chengchi University, a Master of Science (M.S.) degree from the University of Pennsylvania, and a Doctor of Education (Ed.D.) degree from the University of Georgia. She then earned a second doctorate, her Ph.D., from Indiana University Bloomington.[4]

Activism

Summarize
Perspective

As an activist, Ho has been drawing attention to women's rights in Taiwan since the 1990s. Though there were no laws criminalizing sexual harassment at the time, sexual assaults on women were increasingly reported in the news after the first legal case on sexual harassment was heard in 1989. In May 1994, Ho led Taiwan's first demonstration against sexual harassment, and devised its slogan, "We don't want sexual harassment, we want orgasms. If you keep sexually harassing us, we'll cut it off with a pair of scissors!"[5]

Zoophilia webpage incident

In April 2003, an article appeared in the China Times claiming that Ho's website had several pages that covered the topic of zoophilia and actively promoted the practice, with images. 13 conservative groups collectively filed a complaint accusing Ho of making obscenities available to children.[6] This sensationalism led to thirteen Christian and conservative organizations collectively filing a complaint with the Taipei District Court. The process lasted for over one year, with a not guilty ruling returned on 15 September 2004, because the zoophilia pages were only one part of the website's essays and reports. Thus the incorporation of some pictures did not constitute an obscenity.[7]

The incident has been seen as an example of sensationalist media and received international attention as a perceived confrontation between conservative aspects of Taiwanese society and sexual freedom.[6][8]

Remove ads

Selected publications

  • Ho, Josephine (2015). "Localized trajectories of queerness and activism under global governance". In Tellis, Ashley; Bala, Sruti (eds.). The Global Trajectoies of Queerness: Re-thinking Same-Sex Politics in the Global South. Leiden & Boston: Brill; Rodopi. pp. 121–136.
  • He 何, Chunrui 春蕤 (1994). 豪爽女人: 女性主義與性解放 [The Gallant Woman--Feminism and Sexual Emancipation] (in Chinese). Taipei: Huangguan Wenxue Chuban.

Honors and awards

See also

Notes

Loading related searches...

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.

Remove ads