Gender Theory in Troubled Times. Rachel Alsop
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Dedication
In memory of Annette Fitzsimons
Gender Theory in Troubled Times
KATHLEEN LENNON & RACHEL ALSOP
polity
Copyright page
Copyright © Kathleen Lennon & Rachel Alsop 2020
The right of Kathleen Lennon & Rachel Alsop to be identified as Authors of this Work has been asserted in accordance with the UK Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988.
First published in 2020 by Polity Press
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ISBN-13: 978-0-7456-8301-0
ISBN-13: 978-0-7456-8302-7 (pb)
A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Names: Lennon, Kathleen, author. | Alsop, Rachel, author.
Title: Gender theory in troubled times / Kathleen Lennon & Rachel Alsop.
Description: Cambridge, UK ; Medford, MA : Polity, 2020. | Includes bibliographical references and index. | Summary: «This timely and necessary intervention revisits gender theory for contemporary times. The authors explore the multiple strands which go into making our gendered identities and refuse a singular ‹truth about gender›, resulting in the ideal critical overview»-- Provided by publisher.
Identifiers: LCCN 2019024006 | ISBN 9780745683010 (hardback) | ISBN 9780745683027 (paperback) | ISBN 9780745683058 (epub)
Subjects: LCSH: Gender identity. | Queer theory. | Sex (Psychology)
Classification: LCC HQ18.55 .L46 2020 | DDC 305.3--dc23
LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2019024006
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Preface
This book began as a second edition of our Theorizing Gender (2002) and then morphed into a new work that revisits many of the same concerns, but in a changed political and social, as well as theoretical, context. The original Theorizing Gender was written in collaboration with Annette Fitzsimons and Ros Minsky. Both are sadly no longer with us, but we remain informed by their knowledge and insights. Regretfully also gone is the Hull Centre for Gender Studies, which for thirty-five years sustained and supported the research of many scholars and activists, including our own. We pay tribute to the commitment and expertise of those who made Hull an important centre of excellence for gendered research, maintained close links with activist groups in the local community, and established and perpetuated a set of international networks. Collectively they/we promoted a commitment to internationalism and localism as key to any feminist agenda, interweaving feminist and LGBTQI+ concerns internationally with those of migration and borders. The legacy of the centre burns bright, however, in the transfer of the Erasmus Mundus GEMMA Masters of Excellence to the Centre for Women’s Studies at the University of York and the ongoing research and teaching of the centre’s alumni across the world, including within the inspiring Global Grace Project. We would also like to thank each other for many years of fruitful and enjoyable collaboration in both teaching and research.
Introduction
What is gender?
This book is about theorizing gender. So, what is gender? When we were writing Theorizing Gender, at the end of the 1990s, the term gender was associated primarily with the psychological, behavioural and social aspects of being a man or a woman, or someone who refuses that binary. It was contrasted with the term sex, which, by many, was taken to be a marker of biological difference. In terms of the famous sex/gender distinction (which we discuss in chapter 1), sexed difference was considered as something biological (often characterized as being male or female) but gender was viewed as socially constructed, variable historically, as well as cross- and intra-culturally, and susceptible to change.
Much has happened to all the terms since then.
Theoretically, the sex/gender distinction has been further problematized (see chapter 1). The apparent givenness of biology in some accounts has been destabilized by feminist biologists, among others, and the necessity of a binary biological division into male and female challenged as itself mediated by cultural assumptions about gender and by norms of heterosexuality. On the other side, the body has been seen as central to the psychological, behavioural and social aspects of being a man or a woman. Gender cannot be pruned off as simply a matter of style. What might be considered a question of style is femininity and masculinity. Femininity would here be considered the modes of appearance and behaviour which are normatively linked, in a specific context, to being a woman, masculinity what is normatively linked to being a man.
Secondly, widely, within English-speaking countries, the term ‘gender’ has come to stand for a positioning of oneself or others as a ‘man’ or a ‘woman’, or as ‘non-binary’, without reference to the sex/gender distinction and without commitment as to whether this positioning