Gendered "Otherness" Experiences in the Body: Difference between revisions

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====Technology makes changing sex easy, and fun, too====
====Technology makes changing sex easy, and fun, too====
* [[Tanith Lee]], [[Drinking Sapphire Wine]] and [[Don't Bite the Sun]]  
* [[Iain M. Banks|Iain M. Banks's]] "Culture" universe, notably ''[[The Player of Games]]''
* [[John Varley]], his "Eight Worlds" universe, particularly [[Steel Beach]] and [[The Golden Globe]]
* [[Tanith Lee]], ''[[Drinking Sapphire Wine]]'' and ''[[Don't Bite the Sun]]''
* [[John Varley|John Varley's]] "Eight Worlds" universe, particularly ''[[Steel Beach]]'' and ''[[The Golden Globe]]''


===Multiple psyches/souls inhabiting the same body===
===Multiple psyches/souls inhabiting the same body===

Revision as of 16:07, 9 June 2006

Many writers have chosen to explore gender roles and the impact of gender on characters' lives and experiences by having their characters live as the other (or another) gender. In SF, this is often sex changes, or alien sexes; in historical or fantasy fiction, there can be "body swaps" between characters, magical transformations, or characters -- often female -- who live and pass as male. Characters may also have "souls" or "spirits" that multiply inhabit the same body, in both science fiction and fantasy.

Some examples:

"Passing women" and girls

The female character has some compelling reason to live as a male, often to avoid physical danger while traveling, or to take advantage of greater adventure or job opportunities. This is a particularly common way for YA fiction to explore gender issues. "Passing women" have shown up in plenty of non-SF works as well, again, particularly in YA fiction. "Passing women" are part of a broader phenomena of, usually, members of discriminated-against classes "passing" themselves as members of the privileged classes. Examples:

Sex changes, body swaps, soul migrations

Focusing on one character who changes their sex, takes over or incarnates into a different sexed body, or swaps bodies with another character, lets the author explore otherness. In the gender context, can provide opportunities for humor and political commentary as psychically "other" characters attempt to adjust to the gender expectations and norms for their new body-gender. Also inherently explores the question of the essentiality of gender and whether it resides in the body or the "soul", or both.

Some authors have also used frequent sex changes as a way of de-essentializing gender or showing that it is No Big Deal; for example, by showing multiple reincarnations across gender, or simple and ubiquitous sex-change technology.

Examples:

Technology makes changing sex easy, and fun, too

Multiple psyches/souls inhabiting the same body

A special instance of soul migrations etc., but the dual (or multiple) inhabitance in the same body permits the author to engage characters in cross-gender dialogue; verbalize their gender dysphoria; comment on the other person's experience or their own experience of the other person's body; show blended gendered experiences (as in sudden bisexuality)

See also gender, sex, transgender, transsexual, cross-dressing, hermaphroditism, intersex, neuter, sexuality