Framing the Imperfect Victim: Gender, Voice, and Visibility in China’s Media Discourse – American Journal of Student Research

American Journal of Student Research

Framing the Imperfect Victim: Gender, Voice, and Visibility in China’s Media Discourse

Publication Date : Aug-12-2025

DOI: 10.70251/HYJR2348.34270280


Author(s) :

Fiona Sun.


Volume/Issue :
Volume 3
,
Issue 4
(Aug - 2025)



Abstract :

This research investigates how gendered expectations shape public perceptions of victimhood in contemporary Chinese media narrative. Focusing on the concept of the “imperfect victim”—a figure disqualified from sympathy due to deviations from behavioral norms—the study analyzes three real world cases: the Xi’an Metro clothing removal incident, the Alibaba sexual assault case, and the Yang Li JD.com commercial partnership controversy. Using a qualitative case study method, I conducted close textual and content analysis of both state media reports and civic responses on Chinese social media platforms such as Weibo and Rednote. Drawing from framing theory and the concept of state media censorship, the project examines how victims’ behaviors, speech, and emotional displays are framed as either credible or illegitimate. The analysis shows that loudness, confidence, and expressiveness, especially when exhibited by women, are often reframed as social disruption, thus undermining their authority and legitimacy. Across all three cases, visibility does not guarantee validation; instead, camera surveillance, textual evidence, and visual testimony become fields of tension where interpretation is constantly debated. These findings challenge the assumption that evidence or exposure alone ensures justice. Instead, victimhood emerges as an earned status based on institutionalized gender and social roles. The study thus concludes that the “imperfect victim” is not an isolated phenomenon, but a recurring figure produced at the intersection of state censorship, social media platform dynamics, and public values.