Deconstructing the Gender Binary: A Butlerian Analysis of Gender Performativity in The Left Hand of Darkness
- AIOR Admin

- 1 day ago
- 1 min read
Kerem Çıkıkçı
Istanbul Aydın University, Turkey

Ursula K. Le Guin explores the fatal flaws of assigned gender roles and challenges heteronormative structures in The Left Hand of Darkness. She uses the science fiction genre to create a fictional world called Gethen in which the inhabitants are ambisexual and gender fluid life forms. Within this context, the human protagonist and the main narrator of the novel, Genly Ai, points out the complexities of Gethenian society. In this regard, Le Guin uses ambisexuality to underscore the implications of binary gender norms on society constructing a world excluding gender-based tension between men and women. According to that, The Left Hand of Darkness can be associated with almost all theories and assumptions in gender studies. Judith Butler’s idea of gender performance perfectly goes parallel with the criticizations of Le Guin. This article revolves around the diverse discrimination and inequalities between gender roles.







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