Long before gender theory became a principal target of the right, it existed principally in academic circles. And one of the leading thinkers in the field was the philosopher Judith Butler. In โGender Troubleโ (from 1990) and in other works, Butler popularized ideas about gender as a social construct, a โperformance,โ a matter of learned behavior. Those ideas proved highly influential for a younger generation, and Butler became the target of traditionalists who abhorred them. A protest at which Butler was burned in effigy, depicted as a witch, inspired their new book, โWhoโs Afraid of Gender?โ It covers the backlash to trans rights in which conservatives from the Vatican to Vladimir Putin create a โphantasmโ of gender as a destructive force. โObviously, nobody who is thinking about gender . . . is saying you canโt be a mother, that you canโt be a father, or weโre not using those words anymore,โ they tell David Remnick. โOr weโre going to take your sex away.โ They also discuss Butlerโs identification as nonbinary after many years of identifying as a woman. โThe young people gave me the โthey,โ โ as Butler puts it. โAt the end of โGender Trouble,โ in 1990, I said, โWhy do we restrict ourselves to thinking there are only men and women?โ . . . This generation has come along with the idea of being nonbinary. [It] never occurred to me! Then I thought, Of course I am. What else would I be? . . . I just feel gratitude to the younger generation, they gave me something wonderful. That also takes humility of a certain kind.โ
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