Undoing Gender addresses the regulation of sexuality and gender that takes
place in psychology, aesthetics, and social policy.In her classic work Gender Trouble - a book that changed the face of gender
studies - Judith Butler presented the idea of "gender performativity"-the
notion that we all 'do' gender in some way. In her new collection of essays,
Butler clarifies the critical task of "undoing gender" when its terms are
produced in the service of regulatory and punitive power. Undoing Gender
addresses the regulation of sexuality and gender that takes place in
psychology, aesthetics, and social policy. These essays revisit the problem of
kinship in light of new challenges to the family form, interrogate the meaning
and purposes of the incest taboo, and challenge the ways in which
intersexuality and transsexuality are pathologized. The volume also includes a
reading of Willa Cather, a speculation on the millennial goals of feminist
theory, as well as a cultural analysis of sexual and racial panic in the
censorship of the arts.; Undoing Gender deepens issues introduced by Butler's earlier scholarship:
the materiality of the body, the meaning and instrument of human agency, the
relation between power and the psyche or power and the body, psychic
triangulation and the incest taboo, the political limits and conditions of
psychoanalysis, and the ramifications of rights discourse for those who are, by
definition, unauthorized to make use of those terms. The volume ends with a
reflection on the way that philosophy is, and must be, engaged with cultural
questions of how power works. Undoing Gender will be essential reading for all
serious readers interested in gender and sexuality, and in questions of
philosophy, language, and the body.