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Margaret Sullivan: She created a document to warn women of sexual harassers, and it’s haunted her ever since

The long-needed reckoning over sexual harassment and assault has taken many forms.

FILE - In this March 8, 2018, file photo, demonstrators supporting the #MeToo movement stage a rally to mark the International Women's Day in Seoul, South Korea. In patriarchal South Korea, the MeToo movement has taken off with unexpected rapidity, toppling male celebrities including a prominent politician. While allegations of sexual abuse began to take toll on reputations of men in power, whether the victims will be able to seek justice and transform the conservative and patriarchal society hinges on changing male-centered views in the judicial system and workplaces. (AP Photo/Ahn Young-joon, File)

Moira Donegan readily admits that she didn’t know what was coming last fall when she briefly posted a crowdsourced document identifying dozens of men in the publishing industry who reportedly had sexually harassed or assaulted women.

“I was naive,” the former New Republic staffer told me by email last week.

Donegan, who is 28, intended the shareable spreadsheet — titled “Sh---y Media Men” — to be circulated privately as a warning system among a fairly small group of women. It would be a digital version of the way a woman might advise her friends to stay away from someone because he’s a creep, or far worse.

Almost immediately, it went viral, and after only 12 hours, Donegan took it down. But in the digital age, it lived on.

So did the repercussions.

Some of the prominent men it identified were fired or disciplined after their employers did internal investigations. Among them: literary critic Leon Wieseltier at the Atlantic and Lorin Stein, editor of the Paris Review. (Wieseltier apologized; Stein acknowledged disrespectful behavior.)

After Donegan’s name became public, she was and continues to be viciously trolled, as have members of her family, she said.

And just last week, the top editor of Harper’s magazine, James Marcus, was fired — largely, he said, because he had opposed from the start his boss’s idea of assigning a contrarian take on the #MeToo movement.

It was the magazine’s public relations head who finally made the story assignment, on the publisher’s behalf, that resulted in the March cover story — one that knocked the #MeToo culture, took Donegan to task personally and denigrated those who supported her. (“Twitter feminists,” author Katie Roiphe scornfully tagged them in her takedown.)

Roiphe argued that there is no room for disagreement on the subject of predatory men: “There is a vicious energy and ugliness beneath the fervor of our new reckoning.” It’s become, she wrote, “blood sport.” The Harper’s story was widely disliked among the magazine’s editorial employees, Marcus told the New York Times.

The firing would amount to nothing more than fleeting media-industry fodder — after all, Harper’s revolving door of editors is well known — if it weren’t for the larger questions it raised.

Donegan explained, months ago, her original intention.

“The anonymous, crowd-sourced document was a first attempt at solving what has seemed like an intractable problem: how women can protect ourselves from sexual harassment and assault,” Donegan in January wrote in the Cut, an online subset of New York. She identified herself as the creator of the spreadsheet in that piece because she had reason to believe, after receiving questions from a magazine fact-checker, that Roiphe’s piece was going to name her. (Roiphe has contested that.)

In her exchange with me, Donegan further explained her reasoning: “Existing reporting channels too often serve to protect the accused, disappear complaints, and further punish women for coming forward.”

Was the spreadsheet unfair to the named men when the contributing women wanted anonymity? Has the whole thing gone too far?

I’ll put myself squarely on Team Donegan. Yes, she was naive about keeping her document circulating quietly as a warning mechanism. But her intentions were righteous and her fears well-founded about what often happens to women who report their truths.

I know of no cases in which men were disciplined solely because of their appearance on the spreadsheet. If it forced employers to look into long-standing situations and take action, so be it. If it caused a great many men to be put on guard — and hence more respectful in their dealings with female colleagues — that’s all to the good.

The long-needed reckoning over sexual harassment and assault has taken many forms, included in the groundbreaking journalism by the Times and the New Yorker recognized last week with the Pulitzer Prize for public service, and by The Washington Post with its reporting on former Alabama Senate candidate Roy Moore, also recognized with a Pulitzer.

Donegan’s spreadsheet and the Harper’s article — as well as their still-reverberating aftermath — were just one small chapter.

But one with lessons that Donegan is still painfully absorbing.

“The past months, including the actions taken by Harper’s, have shown me how much risk all of us who used [the spreadsheet] took in trying to shield one another from harm,” Donegan told me.

“The choices that Harper’s made made it clear to me how much persistence and resolve will be required in the ongoing fight for women’s rights and dignity.”

And should you think for a moment that the #MeToo movement has gone too far, consider how quickly we’re hearing of comebacks by the likes of comic Louis C.K., NBC star Matt Lauer and celebrity chef Mario Batali.

Persistence and resolve — and courage — had better not be in short supply.

| Courtesy Margaret Sullivan, op-ed mug shot.

Margaret Sullivan is The Washington Post’s media columnist. Previously, she was the New York Times public editor, and the chief editor of the Buffalo News, her hometown paper.