Ungendered or ambiguously gendered characters: Difference between revisions

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* Arnold, June. The Cook and the Carpenter
NOTE: Some of the explanations below contain spoilers.


* [[June Arnold]] . [[The Cook and the Carpenter]]


* Baum, Frank.* The Land of Oz (gender-switch)
* [[L. Frank Baum]].* [[Oz|''The Land of Oz'']] The young boy Tip is eventually revealed to be the Princess Ozma.
* L. Frank Baum. The Enchanted Island of Yew
* [[L. Frank Baum]]. ''The Enchanted Island of Yew''
* Emma Bull. Bone Dance.
*[[Marion Zimmer Bradley]]. [[Darkover]] Despite its inclusion in this list, Darkover is not generally known for its ungendered characters; it does feature homosexual characters, and also celibacy as a path to magical power
* [[Emma Bull]]. ''[[Bone Dance]]''. Sparrow, the protagonist of ''Bone Dance'' appears to be a character whose gender the author is deliberately not revealing, but in fact Sparrow is something very different.


* [[Sarah Caudwell]]. ''[[Thus was Adonis Murdered]]'', ''[[The Shortest Way to Hades]]'', ''[[The Sirens Sang of Murder]]'' and ''[[The Sibyl in Her Grave]]''.


* Caldwell, Sarah. Thus was Adonis Murdered.
* [[Candas Jane Dorsey]]. ''[[Machine Sex and Other Stories]]''
* [[Candas Jane Dorsey]]. ''[[Dark Earth Dreams]]'' (discbook).
* [[L. Timmel Duchamp]] . "[[Welcome, Kid, to the Real World]]" in ''[[Tales of the Unanticipated]]'', Spring / Summer / Fall 1996




* Dorsey, Candas. Machine Sex and Other Stories
* [[Greg Egan]]. ''[[Distress]]''
* Candas Dorsey. Dark Earth Dreams (discbook).
* [[Kelley Eskridge]]. "[[And Salome Danced]]," in ''Little Deaths,'' edited by [[Ellen Datlow]]; ''Best Lesbian Erotica,'' edited by Tristan Taormino; ''[[Flying Cups and Saucers]]'', edited by [[Debbie Notkin]] and [[Secret Feminist Cabal, The|The Secret Feminist Cabal]] The viewpoint character in this short story is a theatrical director, fascinated and confused by an actor who can audition for and play parts across the gender spectrum, inhabiting whichever gender seems appropriate at the time.
* Duchamp, L. Timmel. "Welcome, Kid, to the Real World" in Tales of the Unanticipated Spring / Summer / Fall 1996


* [[Mary Gentle]]. ''[[Golden Witchbreed]]''.


* Egan, Greg. Distress
* [[Phyllis Ann Karr]] ''[[At Amberleaf Fair]]''
* Eskridge, Kelly. "And Salome Danced." (Little Deaths, Ellen Datlow, ed, 1996, and Best Lesbian Erotica, Tristan Taomino, ed.)


* [[Ursula K. Le Guin]]. ''[[The Left Hand of Darkness]]''
* [[Ursula K. Le Guin]]. "[[Coming of Age in Karhide]]," in ''New Legends'' edited by Greg Bear
* [[Ursula K. Le Guin]]. "[[Winter's King]]," in ''[[The Wind's Twelve Quarters]]'' and elsewhere.


* Gentle, Mary. Golden Witchbreed.
On Karhide, all inhabitants are ungendered, except when in [[''kemmer'']], a pre-reproductive state which occurs in adults approximately one week every month. Adults may become male or female in any particular kemmer. If an adult in kemmer as a female becomes pregnant, she remains female long enough to bear and nurse the baby, and then returns to the natural ungendered state.


* [[Walt Leibscher]]. "[[Do Androids Dream of Electric Love?]]" in ''Strange Bedfellows,'' edited by Thomas N. Scortia


* Karr, Phyllis. At Amberleaf Fair
* [[Laurie J. Marks]]. ''[[Delan the Mislaid]]''.
* [[Laurie Marks]]. ''[[The Moonbane Mage]]''.
* [[Laurie Marks]]. ''[[Ara's Field]]''.
* [[Vonda N. McIntyre]]. ''[[Dreamsnake]]''. The character of Merideth is never given a gender identification.
* [[Judith Moffet]] . ''[[Time Like an Ever-Rolling Stream]]''


* Le Guin, Ursula. Left Hand of Darkness
* [[Melissa Scott]]. ''[[The Kindly Ones]]''.
* Ursula K. Le Guin. "Coming of Age in Karhide." (New Legends, Greg Bear, ed.)
* [[Nancy Springer]]. ''[[Larque on the Wing]]''. The protagonist switches gender early in this [[Tiptree Award]]-winning novel.
* Leibscher, Walt. "Do Androids Dream of Electric Love?" in Strange Bedfellows edited by Thomas N. Scortia (1972)
* [[Theodore Sturgeon]]. ''[[Venus Plus X]]''. A planet in which people appear to have no gender.
* [[Caitlin Sullivan]] and [[Kate Bornstein]]. ''[[Nearly Roadkill]]''.


* [[Élisabeth Vonarburg]]. ''[[Silent City]]''.
* [[Élisabeth Vonarburg]].  "[[In the Pit]]," in ''Tesseracts 2,'' edited by [[Phylis M. Gotlieb]] and Douglas Barbour
* [[Élisabeth Vonarburg]].  "[[Bande Ohne Ende]]," in ''Tomorrow,'' 1/94, #3


* Marks, Laurie. Delan the Mislaid
* [[Jeanette Winterson]]. ''[[Written on the Body]]''
* Laurie Marks. The Moonbane Mage
* Laurie Marks. Ara's Field
* Moffet, Judith. Time Like an Ever-Rolling Stream


* [[Chelsea Quinn Yarbro]]. "[[Allies]]," in ''Cautionary Tales'' All characters have gender-ambiguous names (like "Chris" and "Sandy") and none has an identified gender throughout the story.


* Scott, Melissa. The Kindly Ones
==Credits==
* Springer, Nancy *. Larque on the Wing
* Sullivan, Caitlin and Kate Bornstein. Nearly Roadkill


A portion of this list was originally compiled by [[Laurie J. Marks]] as "Gender Ambiguity: A Seriously Incomplete Bibliography of Fiction in Which Gender Is Eliminated or Ambiguous" (1997 May 22) available at the feministsf.org website at http://feministsf.org/bibs/ambiggen.html


* Élisabeth Vonarburg. Silent City.
* Élisabeth Vonarburg.  "In the Pit" (Tesseracts 2).
* Élisabeth Vonarburg.  "Bande Ohne Ende" (Tomorrow, 1/94, #3)


 
[[Category:Gender and sex themes]]
* Winterson, Jeanette. Written on the Body
[[Category:Lists of works by theme]]
 
[[category:Themes and tropes by name]]
 
* Yarbro, Chelsea Quinn. "Allies" (in Cautionary Tales (1978)

Latest revision as of 09:36, 20 December 2010

NOTE: Some of the explanations below contain spoilers.

  • L. Frank Baum.* The Land of Oz The young boy Tip is eventually revealed to be the Princess Ozma.
  • L. Frank Baum. The Enchanted Island of Yew
  • Marion Zimmer Bradley. Darkover Despite its inclusion in this list, Darkover is not generally known for its ungendered characters; it does feature homosexual characters, and also celibacy as a path to magical power
  • Emma Bull. Bone Dance. Sparrow, the protagonist of Bone Dance appears to be a character whose gender the author is deliberately not revealing, but in fact Sparrow is something very different.


On Karhide, all inhabitants are ungendered, except when in ''kemmer'', a pre-reproductive state which occurs in adults approximately one week every month. Adults may become male or female in any particular kemmer. If an adult in kemmer as a female becomes pregnant, she remains female long enough to bear and nurse the baby, and then returns to the natural ungendered state.

  • Chelsea Quinn Yarbro. "Allies," in Cautionary Tales All characters have gender-ambiguous names (like "Chris" and "Sandy") and none has an identified gender throughout the story.

Credits

A portion of this list was originally compiled by Laurie J. Marks as "Gender Ambiguity: A Seriously Incomplete Bibliography of Fiction in Which Gender Is Eliminated or Ambiguous" (1997 May 22) available at the feministsf.org website at http://feministsf.org/bibs/ambiggen.html