Judith Butler

GENDER TROUBLE: Feminism and the Subversion of Identity

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  • Bárbara Bertoldohas quoted5 years ago
    feminism ought to be careful not to idealize certain expressions of gender that, in turn, produce new forms of hierarchy and exclusion. In particular, I opposed those regimes of truth that stipulat-ed that certain kinds of gendered expressions were found to be false or derivative, and others, true and original
  • tyahas quoted3 years ago
    “women”? The masculine/feminine binary constitutes not only the exclusive framework in which that specificity can be recognized, but in every other way the “specificity” of the feminine is once again fully decontextualized and separated off analytically and politically from the constitution of class, race, ethnicity, and other axes of power relations that both constitute “identity” and make the singular notion of identity a misnomer.
  • tyahas quoted3 years ago
    Juridical notions of power appear to regulate political life in purely negative terms—that is, through the limitation, prohibition, regulation, control, and even “protection” of individuals related to that political structure through the contingent and retractable operation of choice. But the subjects regulated by such structures are, by virtue of being subjected to them, formed, defined, and reproduced in accordance with the requirements of those structures.
  • Felix Vilmovskyhas quoted4 years ago
    In other words, the insistence upon the coherence and unity of the category of women has effectively refused the multiplicity of cultural, social, and political intersections in which the concrete array of “women” are constructed.
  • Felix Vilmovskyhas quoted4 years ago
    Feminist critique ought to explore the totalizing claims of a masculinist signifying economy, but also remain self-critical with respect to the totalizing gestures of feminism. The effort to identify the enemy as singular in form is a reverse-discourse that uncritically mimics the strategy of the oppressor instead of offering a different set of terms. That the tactic can operate in feminist and antifeminist contexts alike suggests that the colonizing gesture is not primarily or irreducibly masculinist
  • Jecko Sanjorjohas quoted4 years ago
    Gender can be rendered ambiguous without disturbing or reorienting normative sexuality at all.
  • Jecko Sanjorjohas quoted4 years ago
    feminism ought to be careful not to idealize certain expressions of gender that, in turn, produce new forms of hierarchy and exclusion
  • Bárbara Bertoldohas quoted5 years ago
    Is “gender hierarchy” sufficient to explain the conditions for the production of gender?
  • Bárbara Bertoldohas quoted5 years ago
    Briefly, one is a woman, according to this framework, to the extent that one functions as one within the dominant heterosexual frame and to call the frame into question is perhaps to lose something of one’s sense of place in gender. I take it that this is the first formulation of

    “gender trouble” in this text.
  • Bárbara Bertoldohas quoted5 years ago
    How do certain sexual practices compel the question: what is a woman, what is a man? If gender is no longer to be understood as consolidated through normative sexuality, then is there a crisis of gender that is specific to queer contexts?
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