The upheaval at the publication shows the raw emotion still surrounding nearly every #MeToo accusation and response, less than a year after the first reports about Harvey Weinstein’s behavior unleashed a tide of allegations against other famous men.

Mr. Ghomeshi counts among several high-profile men, including the comedian Louis C. K. and the former public radio host John Hockenberry, who have recently resurfaced in the public eye after allegations of sexual misconduct or harassment. The re-entry attempts have been met with both approval and opprobrium — Louis C. K.’s surprise stand-up set last month in New York was applauded by the crowd and denounced by many others — underscoring how little consensus exists about what sort of redemption the #MeToo men deserve.

Mr. Hockenberry wrote a 7,000-word piece titled “Exile” in Harper’s Magazine this month, ruing his continued banishment and shaming. “For almost a year I have lived as a pariah facing cold silence or open hostility in public,” he wrote. “I have watched presumed friends vanish. I have listened to colleagues, lawyers, and P.R. professionals tell me that I am unemployable.”

Mr. Ghomeshi’s essay, which was half as long, was published online last Friday. Attempts to reach him for comment on Wednesday were unsuccessful.

The magazine did not say whether Mr. Buruma, 66, had resigned or been fired, and he did not respond to a phone call and email seeking comment. But Mr. Buruma told a Dutch magazine that he had felt compelled to resign because of the criticism and because university-affiliated book publishers, The Review’s core advertisers, had been threatening a boycott.