4B movement
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4B or "Four Nos" is a radical feminist[1] movement that emerged in South Korea during the mid-to-late 2010s[2][3] on Twitter[4] and on the website Womad. The name refers to its defining four tenets which all start with the Korean-language term bi (Korean: 비; Hanja: 非), roughly meaning "no".[5] Its proponents do not date, get married, have sex, or have children with men.[6]
In South Korea, a portion of its members, particularly those associated with Womad, were described as transphobic and homophobic.[7]
Beliefs
The four core tenets to the 4B movement are:
- no sex with men (Korean: 비섹스; RR: bisekseu),
- no giving birth (비출산; bichulsan),
- no dating men (비연애; biyeonae), and
- no marriage with men (비혼; bihon).[2][8]
Bihon (marriage)
Since 2005, the feminist activist group UnniNetwork has promoted bihon as a political agenda to challenge the centrality of the heteronormative family model of marriage in Korea. They sought to replace mihon ('not married'), with a more neutral term, bihon ('single').[9]
Bichulsan (childbirth)
South Korea has one of the lowest birth rates in the world.[10] With the fertility rate at just 0.7 (as of 2023) each South Korean woman on average will have fewer than one child in her lifetime.[11] This is significantly below the 2.1 threshold required to maintain a country's population.[12] The country's birth rate has been below replacement rate since 1983,[13] while the 4b movement originated in the 2010s, making it likely that the low birth rate is due to economic insecurity experienced by young adults, high child-rearing costs and property prices, and the country's deeply ingrained patriarchal culture. These factors contribute to women's reluctance to embrace traditional roles of marriage and motherhood.[12][14][15]
Having the world's lowest fertility rate, the South Korean government has adopted pro-natalist policies aimed at incentivizing an increase in childbirths, such as stipends for new parents, increased maternal and paternal leave, and child care subsidies.[16]
A 2022 survey reveals that 65% of women, compared to 48% of men, do not want children.[17]
Biyeonae (romance) and bisekseu (sexual relationships)
Women of the 4B movement additionally refuse romance and sexual relationships, because they see it as an extension of the patriarchal family structure. By embracing singlehood, they criticize the view of the pronatalist state that female reproductivity is a resource for the nation's future.[18]
Notable proponents
Jung Se-young and Baeck Ha-na, two proponents, criticize marriage as reinforcing gender roles in South Korea.[8] The movement draws some amount of inspiration from the novel Kim Ji-young, Born 1982, as do South Korea's MeToo and "Escape the Corset" movements.[3] The 4B movement claimed to have 4,000 members in 2019.[19]
History
The term 4B emerged from Korean feminist circles on Twitter around 2017 to 2018,[20] after a highly publicized 2016 murder of a woman by a man.[21] The murderer, who said he did it because women had ignored him, was not charged with a hate crime.[22] The 4B movement was also a reaction to social media content, including a misogynistic social media platform Ilbe Storehouse, which grew in prominence in 2014.[23]
The first 4B groups articulated their principles on the Korean feminist Wiki site Femi Wiki, where they originally defined 4B as "The motto of radical feminism, which means 'non-marriage, non-procreation, non-relationship, non-sex.'"[citation needed]
The 4B movement gained broader recognition on Twitter in 2019 and through various feminist social media accounts. One notable feature of the 4B movement, as with other Korean digital feminist movements, is that members often identify themselves as "anonymous women," as it is conventional not to disclose personal details online.[18]
This digital movement functions as an online community where women engage in open discussion about navigating and envisioning a future without men. It serves as a platform for women to vent their frustrations and concerns about living in a conservative society while fostering a sense of solidarity. Additionally, the platform aims to motivate and inspire women to protest against dating, engaging in sexual relationships, getting married, and having children. Through a robust online presence, the movement seeks to raise awareness and recruit more advocates to amplify its impact.[24]
Although the exact membership remains uncertain, some unverified estimates suggest a range of 500 to 4,000 claimed participants.[25]
Escape the Corset Movement
The "Escape the Corset" Movement that started in 2016 served as a source of inspiration for the 4B movement. The movement calls for women to liberate themselves from sexual, social, bodily, and from psychological oppression.[26] The word "corset" is used by Korean feminists as a metaphor for the societal mechanisms that bind and repress women, including toxic beauty standards. Notably, South Korea has the 10th largest beauty market globally and is the third-largest exporter of cosmetics.[27] In a society where beauty holds immense cultural and economic significance, members of the "Escape the Corset" Movement criticize and resist cosmetic procedures, demanding skincare or makeup rituals, and the adoption of trendy clothing, all seen as perpetuating consumerism and misogynistic social norms. In protest, they express their defiance by destroying makeup, forgoing cosmetic enhancements, shaving their heads, and rejecting fashionable attire. Escape the Corset's analysis and approach to protest deeply influenced the 4B movement.[26]
South Korea's #MeToo movement
Although the #MeToo movement originated in the United States in 2006 and gained popularity in 2017, many other countries, including South Korea, created #MeToo movements of their own. The #MeToo movement in South Korea, like those in other countries, encouraged women to express their experiences of sexual harassment to inspire social change. Shortly after its inception in late 2017, several hundred women stepped forward with claims of sexual harassment and violence.[28] This movement also led to women who were forced into sex work as a result of World War II and the Japanese occupation of Korea to speak out for the first time and in large numbers.[28] The Korean #MeToo movement also focused on femicide, non-consensual pornography, and misogynistic practices in the workplace.
The #MeToo movement also inspired various online hashtag campaigns, most popularly the #WithYou[28] tag, to signal solidarity with survivors of sexual assault who had spoken up in the #MeToo movement. These various hashtags inspired the formation of women's activist groups, such as Citizens Action to Support the #MeToo Movement, who campaigned to end gendered oppression and support victims of sexual abuse in South Korea.[17]
United States interest
After the 2024 United States presidential election in which Donald Trump won a second term, some American women expressed interest in the 4B movement as a form of protest against Trump's election, his alleged sexual assaults, and for his role in the overturning of Roe v. Wade.[22] Shortly after the election was called, TikTok videos mentioning 4B were viewed hundreds of thousands of times, and Google searches about it spiked by 450%. American women have called the movement the "4 Nos" and "Lysistrata".[20][29]
Purpose
The 4B movement is meant to serve as a direct opposition to South Korea's patriarchal state and combat its pro-natalist policies, which view women's bodies and reproductive abilities as tools for the state's future. Feminists who engage in the 4B movement are known to actively resist the various ways in which gendered expectations are enforced in a conservative society, specifically relating to child-rearing, relationships, and employment.[30] This resistance involves not only withdrawing from dating but also rejecting prevalent gendered beauty standards and their associated consumerist practices in South Korea.[18] In a conservative and traditional society, alternative forms of protest in the 4B movement include defying rigid beauty norms and traditional gendered expectations by shaving heads and choosing not to wear bras.[23]
While 4B advocates aspire to instigate societal change through in-person demonstrations, online activism, and by exemplifying an alternative lifestyle for other women, their focus is not on changing the perspective of men, as they are seen as oppressors.[31]
Social media controversy
It has been speculated that the movement may have contributed to South Korea's decreasing birth rate.[32] Others claimed that the 4B movement's scale and impact are massively exaggerated.[33]
Transphobia and homophobia in the South Korean movement
Radical feminism as a whole in South Korea has had a notable transphobic and homophobic (against male homosexuals) presence, with internal dispute about the acceptability of such beliefs.[7][34][35][36] The 4B movement was significantly popular on (and widely publicly associated with) the South Korean website Womad, which is openly misandric, homophobic, and transphobic. The website was founded because Megalia had begun prohibiting homophobic and transphobic slurs.[18][37][36] Womad members reportedly advocated for revenge against men, advocated for disliked people to commit suicide, and some threatened violence and committed crimes against men. Any women who had children were criticized as enablers of patriarchy, with some being likened to slaves.[38]
See also
- 6B4T movement
- Behavioral sink
- Female separatism
- Kim Iryeop
- Neijuan
- Political lesbianism
- Anti-natalism
- Church of Euthanasia – Religious anti-natalist organization
- Shakers, an 18th-century religious movement whose members also refused marriage, sex and child-rearing against the wider culture; they eventually went extinct
- Voluntary Human Extinction Movement
- Sampo generation
- Aging of South Korea
- Lysistrata
References
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- Kuk, Jihye; Park, Hyejung; Norma, Caroline (8 November 2018). "Radical feminism paves the way for a resurgent South Korean women's movement". Feminist Current. Retrieved 8 May 2024.
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Koreans use the term Mihon, literally translated as 'not yet married,' to refer to those who are not married. Recognizing that the term stigmatizes those who are not married, especially women, as abnormal and immature, Unninetwork chooses to use the term Bihon, 'not married.'
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- ^ a b c d Lee, Jieun; Jeong, Euisol (4 July 2021). "The 4B movement: envisioning a feminist future with/in a non-reproductive future in Korea". Journal of Gender Studies. 30 (5): 633–644. doi:10.1080/09589236.2021.1929097. ISSN 0958-9236. S2CID 236179425. Archived from the original on 28 October 2023. Retrieved 6 December 2023.
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