(2004) is comprised of a collection of eleven essays, all of which derive from Judith Butler's theoretical work on gender and sexuality. In writing
Undoing Gender, Butler sought to rework her theories on gender performativity as presented in her work
Gender Trouble(1990), and, in doing so, engage with her critics. Butler asks us to imagine gender and sexuality outside societal norms, in that these norms, and in particular gender as a norm, “figures as a precondition for the production and maintenance of legible humanity” (11). Those individuals who fall outside the hetero-norm, such as transsexuals, intersexuals, and homosexuals, put into question their very existence as human beings. In this ontology of selfhood and Otherness, Butler wants to know, if norms author our…
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Citation: Riley, Samantha Michele. "Undoing Gender". The Literary Encyclopedia. First published 02 November 2009 [https://www.litencyc.com/php/sworks.php?rec=true&UID=27763, accessed 26 November 2024.]