List of illustrationsNotes on contributorsAcknowledgementsIntroduction: intimacy, injury and #MeToo in India and South AfricaSrila RoyNicky FalkofShilpa PhadkePart I Pre-histories1 South Africa's own `Delhi moment': news coverage of the murders of Jyoti Singh and Anene BooysenNechatna Brodie2 Hokkolorob, campus politics and the pre-histories of #MeTooParomita ChakravartiJhelum Roy3 Reading in-between the sheets: in conversation about SWEAT's #SayHerNameNtokozo YingwanaNosipho VidimaReflection: `When will the state be #MeToo'd?'Jyotsna SiddharthPart II #MeToo's silences4 Moments of erasure of the testimonies of sexual violence against Dalit womenRupali Bansode5 #MeToo and the troubling of the rural public sphere in India: a feminist media house reports from the hinterlandDisha Mullick6 Contesting the meaning/s of sexual violence in the South African postcolony: where are the male victims?Louise du Toit7 Rebuilding precarious solidarities: a feminist debate in internet timeShilpa PhadkeReflection: progressive men and predatory practicesJessica BreakeyPart III Institutional locations: the university and the state8 #EndRapeCulture and #MeToo: of intersectionality, rage and injuryAmanda Gouws9 From harassment to transgression: understanding changes in the legal landscape of sexual harassment in IndiaRukmini Sen10 Feminism and Fallism in institutions: in conversation with Jackie DugardZuziwe KhuzwayoRagi BashongaReflection: beyond the media storm -- on sexual harassment in the news and the newsroomsNithila KanagasabaiPart IV Affect and aesthetics11 Fury, pain, resentment and fierceness: configurations of con/destructive affective activism in women's organisingPeace Kiguwa12 Queer feminism and India's #MeTooJaya Sharma13 Fugitive aesthetics: performing refusal in four actsSwati AroraReflection: `Gay boys don't cry when we're raped' -- queer shame and secrecyJamil F. KhanIndex