The first thing I did when reading Judith Butler’s new book, “Who’s Afraid of Gender?”, was to look up the word “phantasm,” which appears 41 times in the introduction alone.
(It means illusion; the “phantasm of gender,” a threat rooted in fear and fantasy.)
In a single word, “gender” holds the power to seemingly drive people mad with fear.
Butler’s latest comes more than three decades after their first and most famous book, “Gender Trouble,” brought the idea of “gender as performance” into the mainstream.
As it turns out, Butler — who has written 15 books since — never intended to return to the subject, even as a culture war raged.
Persons:
Judith Butler’s, “, ”, Butler —, —, Butler
Locations:
Russia, Brazil