Tag Archive: Identity


GENDER TROUBLE by Judith Butler

“One is not born a woman, but rather becomes one.” —Simone de Beauvoir

“Does the body rule the mind, or does the mind rule the body? I dunno – The Smiths (‘Still Ill’)

I have written this post – my first of 2024 – to help me to clarify some the mind (and body) blowing ideas contained in Judith Butler’s influential but still controversial book ‘Gender Trouble’ which was first published by Routledge in 1990.

At the heart of Butler’s treatise are two fundamental questions: What is a woman?  What is a man?

In her 1999 preface to the 3rd edition, Judith Butler clarifies her intentions stating that one of her primary motivations was to challenge the restrictive definition of gender in feminist theory. She affirms that  woman does not only exhibit her womanness through heterosexual coitus “in which her subordination becomes her pleasure.”

We are conditioned to accept the principle that  power, reason and rationality should always be associated with masculinity while  femininity is confined to a passive role of being in thrall to these qualities. Under the rigid terms of paternal law “the female body [is] characterized primarily in terms of its reproductive function.”

One of the main criticisms of ‘Gender Trouble’ is that it is written in a heightened academic style which many have found both incomprehensible and pretentious. Butler insists “I am not trying to be difficult” yet  acknowledges that the book is not written in a populist style. Her defence is that complex subjects do not lend themselves to simplification : “If I treat that grammar as pellucid, then I fail to call attention precisely to that sphere of language that establishes and disestablishes intelligibility.” 

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POLY STYRENE DIES: DAY-GLO TURNS BLACK


After the passing of Ari-Up from the Slits last October ,the sad news today is that another female Punk icon has fallen at a shockingly early age.

Poly Styrene (Marianne Joan Elliott-Said) died yesterday of cancer aged 53.

Poly understood the DIY message of Punk better than most as she realised it wasn’t about slavishly following a set look or wearing an official uniform. She recognised that the whole ethos was not about  jumping on a rebellious bandwagon but about finding your own self expression.

For women, Punk Rock was particularly liberating as it meant you didn’t have to look like you’d just stepped off a catwalk onto the stage. Poly looked frumpy and awkward but this was a major part of her appeal as it mocked the celebrity image that dominates the media to this day. Continue reading