Why so much fear about gender? A new book looks for answers.
The pioneering theorist Judith Butler’s latest takes aim at the anti-gender-ideology movement
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The pioneering theorist Judith Butler’s latest takes aim at the anti-gender-ideology movement
More From The Washington Post (subscription required):
The Tokyo Olympics prompted the latest furor over transgender participation in women’s sports. It came when New Zealand named a transgender woman (above) to its weightlifting team. This athlete’s participation raises questions far beyond this Olympics or that particular sport. The same questions arise whenever a transgender person competes at any level, from high school to world-class. When the winner takes the victory stand, biological women can’t help but wonder if they were treated fairly. Transgender athletes respond, pointedly, that it would be unfair to exclude them. “She’s a woman,” they say. “This is a woman’s event. So she should compete.” The problem with this debate is that it raises other fundamental questions: Should we have women’s sports at all? Why? What is the rationale—and how compelling is it?
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