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16/7/2020 Megalia: South Korean Feminism Takes Powerful Twist | KOREA EXPOSÉ

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Megalia: South Korean Feminism Marshals the


Power of the Internet
IDENTITY Emily Singh July 29, 2016

Founded on August 6th, 2015, independent website


Megalian.com embodies a new type of feminism – one that uses
the country’s world-class information and communications
technology infrastructure to promote gender equality and to
humorously bash misogyny on the South Korean web.
The name, currently filed for trademark registration by one of its users, is a
neologism combining ‘MERS gallery’, the web forum where the movement was
born, and ‘Egalia’, of Gerd Brantenberg’s satiric novel Egalia’s
Daughters. Megalian.com operates strictly on an anonymous basis, with all
members posting under the same nickname, except for notices regarding server
maintenance by the site’s administrators, who nevertheless remain anonymous (As
of December 2015, the few interviews conducted with its members or admins
have not revealed any personal information).

The collective movement began in June 2015, when women began to ‘mirror’ the
misogynic comments made by male members on DCInside.com, a popular web
forum. What was conceived as a minor page dedicated to sharing information
on MERS-CoV, the Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus, turned to a
battleground between the sexes. Male users began launching hate speech on two
South Korean women affected by MERS who, due to miscommunication, did not
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comply to the South Korean government’s call for quarantine. Women fought
back, parroting back male users’ comments by simply replacing the words ‘women’
with ‘men’, a tactic they actively promote as ‘mirroring’.

Megalia’s members, who call themselves ‘Megalians’, have since created a stir in
the South Korean media. Opponents call them men-haters and accuse them
of fighting hate back with hate – that these women have gone too far. This is
precisely the point, Megalians say. To see the misogyny that is today taken as
acceptable social behaviour and spat at South Korean women every day: to turn it
around so men and women alike can witness it in its honest, raw form –
discrimination.

At the moment of its conception in August, the site had 170,000 unique visitors
(data bysimilarweb.com). This number has continued to grow, adding another
100K almost every month. The November stats stand at 370,000. About 83%
percent of its visitors log in from tech-savvy South Korea, while 10% hail from
the US, and smaller numbers from Canada, Japan and New Zealand. (A portion
of users are also based in European nations).

About a quarter of its traffic stems from referrals – most notably from Ilbe.com, a
website whose members have been Megalia’s target of criticism and vice versa
since the movement began at DCInside.com. Ilbe, a site dedicated to sharing
humour whose political stance leans towards the extreme right, has continuously
faced accusations from the general South Korean population for its largely
unmoderated content – much like 4chan in the rest of the world. Its notoriety
stems from members’ ad hominem attacks targeting specific groups, such as
women and South Koreans originating from Jeolla province. Users have been
sentenced for using the terms ‘fish cake’ and ‘barbecue meat’ to mock the
hundreds of people killed in the 2014 Sewol ferry disaster and the 2003 Daegu
subway fire.

Megalia’s logo reflects its satiric nature, heavily influenced by the feminist novel
Egalia’s Daughters: A Satire of the Sexes by Norwegian author Gerd
Brantenberg. In the influential feminist oeuvre, Brantenberg narrates a world

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where gender roles are entirely reversed – linguistically (women are called ‘wim’
and men ‘menwim’, making the man the suffix), socially (women are by default
given the upper hand at the home and in society due to their power to give birth),
and sexually (men are at constant risk of sexual assault; the blame is entirely theirs
and not of their assailant). The logo alludes to South Korean society’s – notably
men’s – highly judgmental attitude towards women’s physical appearance and
mirrors the male obsession with women’s sexuality and physical attributes by
mocking the size of South Korean men’s penises – ‘they are just not good enough‘.

The satire and humour culminated in the creation of a Megalian dictionary as


well as the parody of a popular South Korean comic targeted at young children
learning basic classical Chinese characters. (All the characters are
reinterpretations of the letter 男, which means ‘man’.)

Popular Megalian vocabulary and expressions include references to social


problems caused by South Korean men as well as inversions of derogatory terms
used by men on sites such as Ilbe:

Chanel lipstick: mocks the kimchi girl concept, a derogatory term used by men to refer to women who buy
brand goods
Papa: refers to South Korean men who’ve had extramarital a airs in South and Southeast Asian countries and
abandoned their spouses once a child was born. (See here for an example of this phenomenon.)
Blue & Green Ilbe: reference to Facebook and Naver, both of which have demonstrated intolerant attitudes
towards feminist comments while supporting misogynistic ones
Schroedinger’s South Korean Man: refers to a study which reported that approximately 58% of of South Korean
men have purchased sexual services
Dead Older Sister: refers to the selective abortion of female foetuses commonly practiced in South Korea up
until the 1990s (in the belief that a son is more important than a daughter)

Although men are the main target of Megalia’s mirroring techniques and retorts,
women receive criticism as well. These women – dubbed ‘corseted’ (after the
restraining fashion device) or ‘Penis Emeritus’ are, however seen as a product of
the male-dominated society, who must break free from the injustices of patriarchy
by individual will (and by joining Megalia, of course). It should be noted that
almost all South Korean women are understood as having undergone a ‘corseted’
phase at some time in their life, as it is a social norm implemented on even the
most feminist children.

The movement doesn’t stop at simply mocking misogyny. It has backed several
feminist campaigns – including the crowdfunding of adverts in Seoul’s public
transport system denouncing pornographic ‘hidden cam’ videos; endorsing
support for and encouraging individual donations be made to New Political
Alliance Democracy politician Jin Sunmee, who is leading a campaign to shut
down Soranet, a South Korean porn hub associated with brokering underage
prostitution and sharing videos of illegal nature. ( Jin’s office received a total of 10
million KRW / 9,000€ / 10,000$ in the 24 hours following the upload of a post
calling Megalians to donate.

The site has worked extensively on exposing Soranet, South Korea’s biggest
pornographic website (over a million users are currently registered) and whose
claim to fame lies on its ability to keep avoiding legal consequences by constantly
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changing domains names and servers, effectively placing it outside the jurisdiction
of South Korean law.

Megalia also played a crucial role in the 2015 Maxim Korea scandal. In its
September 2015 issue, MAXIM Korea’s cover depicts the images of a naked
woman’s feet dangling out of a car boot, with the slogan “This is what a real bad
man is like. How do you like me now?”. The photo spread within the issue goes
on to show the images, most likely of the assumed female victim in the boot,
looking up at the assailant, then being dragged away in a plastic body bag. The
magazine took a defensive stance at the accusations, and only issued an apology
after international media and a spokesperson for MAXIM US condemned the
images.

COVER OF MAXIM KOREA’S SEPTEMBER 2015 ISSUE

Other activities Megalia is collectively responsible for include:

September: Successfully shutting down the sale of ‘hidden cam’ type devices on Ticketmonster (Tmon), a South
Korean e-commerce platform (unrelated to the ticket sales site ticketmonster.com). Following dozens of calls
of complaint from Megalians, Tmon stopped sales and issued an o cial apology. Wemakeprice.com, which sold
similar products also retracted sales but have not published an apology.

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September: Donated over 6 million KRW (4,700€/5,100$) to Aeranwon, an NGO which helps single mothers
September: Contacted Hanshin University’s student council regarding a series of on-campus banners containing
misogynic slogans. The council subsequently issued an o cial apology and removed all banners
October: Stopped sale of high-concentrate hydrochloric acid on 11st.co.kr by ling complaint to the Ministry of
Environment. Hydrochloric and sulphuric acid have been used as weapons in cases of hate crime committed by
men on women

As of December 25th, the site was running several funding and media campaigns.
A YouTube channel dedicated to providing information on hate crimes in South
Korea uploads videos with English, French, Japanese, Mandarin, and Spanish
subtitles.

However, the site is not without trouble. In early December, a debate erupted
over whether the site should support gay men’s rights. (The site is supportive of
the lesbian community). Some members argued that gay men should not be
exempt from criticism, as they are also part of the South Korean male community
which the site targets. The administrators ruled that members should not use
derogatory satiric terms to refer to gay men, and that decision resulted in a mass
exodus. Womad, an alternative to Megalian.com was proposed, but as of
December 25th, no site has been launched and its Daum forum has been made
private. [Update July 22nd, 2016: Still no website; Daum forum running].

Since the December exodus, several sites pretending to be an alternative


to Megalian.com have popped up, taking advantage of the confusion and luring
Megalians to join or to visit them. However, few Megalians have actually joined
them, as they were warned beforehand on the forums.

Men, mostly from the rival site Ilbe, have also been vandalising and lurking on
Megalia, a site dominated by female users (including transgender and transsexual
women). As Megalia operates on a strict anonymity basis and insists on an easy-
to-join-and-leave policy, there is no way to block users based on any information.
South Korean web portals such as Naver and Daum require users to provide their
national identity number (replaced with Web ID in 2014), which allows admins
and moderators of forums to restrict membership based on age and/or gender –
but take away any chance at anonymity.

This anonymity is both Megalia’s advantage and drawback, since it guarantees full
freedom of speech to members while diminishing the ease of blocking users. A
few members have been blocked through IP address tracking; however, in general,
the admins do not moderate the posts and only issue warnings if several reports
have been filed.

Since December 2015, administrators and financial backers of the website have
continuously received criticism on their lack of transparency, but no official
statement has been released.

Megalia (Korean only): http://megalian.com/

Timeline of Megalia’s main activities (Korean only):


http://timetree.zum.com/123516

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Update: As of May 2016, most users have migrated to either the radical
WOMADIC (Daum cafe) or to the softer LADISM (Daum cafe).

Editor’s note: This article first appeared on realkoreans.com and was reprinted
with the author’s permission.

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Emily Singh Emily Singh is a translator and interpreter from Seoul. More of her
Read latest posts writings can be found at realkoreans.com.

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