Ungendered or ambiguously gendered characters: Difference between revisions

From Feminist SF Wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
No edit summary
(No difference)

Revision as of 20:18, 26 November 2007

NOTE: Some of the explanations below contain spoilers.

    The young boy Tip is eventually revealed to be the Princess Ozma.
    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
    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.
    The character of Merideth is never given a gender identification.
    The protagonist switches gender early in this Tiptree Award-winning novel.
    A planet in which people have no gender.
    All characters have gender-ambiguous names (like "Chris" and "Sandy") and none has an identified gender.

Credits

List 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