The Political Scene | The New Yorker | Judith Butler on the Global Backlash to L.G.B.T.Q. Rights

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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 โ€œGender Troubleโ€ (from 1990) and in other works, Butler popularized ideas about gender as a social construct, a โ€œperformance,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, โ€œWhoโ€™s Afraid of Gender?โ€ It covers the backlash to trans rights in which conservatives from the Vatican to Vladimir Putin create a โ€œphantasmโ€ of gender as a destructive force. โ€œObviously, nobody who is thinking about gender . . . is saying you canโ€™t be a mother, that you canโ€™t be a father, or weโ€™re not using those words anymore,โ€ they tell David Remnick. โ€œOr weโ€™re going to take your sex away.โ€ They also discuss Butlerโ€™s identification as nonbinary after many years of identifying as a woman. โ€œThe young people gave me the โ€˜they,โ€™ โ€ as Butler puts it. โ€œAt the end of โ€˜Gender Trouble,โ€™ in 1990, I said, โ€˜Why 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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