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Karen Sichler

Post Queerness: Hyperreal Gender


and the End of the Quest for Origins

Introduction
The contemporary United States is awash in media constructedness of gender, its unnatural and
images working in concert to create and sustain a nonnecessary status, but the cultural universality
static, heternormative view of the dyadic structure of oppression in nonbiologistic terms.”1In the
of gender in which only masculine and feminine quest to assay the sex/gender binary, Butler circles
identities achieve mainstream acknowledgement around semantic discussions of the constitution
and, thus, intelligibility. In order to dismantle of reality. By allowing the question of reality
this rather limited model of the gendered body, to direct the debate, however, Butler ultimately
theorists such as Judith Butler have endeavored misses an opportunity to free the contemporary
to reconsider the gender binary by examining the notion of gender from its tethers to the social
ways in which the gendered body has been and is convention of triginality in a hierarchal structure
currently manufactured by our mediated culture. of value. Conceiving of gender within a hyper-real
While in the process of critiquing the socially framework is of particular importance to the field
constructed concept of gender, Butler often of communications and media studies due to not
becomes mired in debates on the implication of only the increasing visibility of non “traditional”
reality within those social constructions as well as performances of gender in conventional electronic
the source of “originality” as an idea. By straining media outlets like television and film, but as well as,
for a point of origin, however, the infinite number and more importantly, the continually multiplying
of examples of individual expressions of highly opportunities for personal expression and ideology
personalized identities are eventually realigned construction in online, virtual realities.
upon a spectrum, with masculine on one end and The purpose of this paper is to introduce
feminine on the other, with minor variations still Judith Butler’s construction of gender to the
owing allegiance to the primary categories. The theoretical model known as hyperreality as
sexed nature of a body, the biological/corporeal conceived by theorist Jean Baudrillard. By
component of the gender equation, has become reading Butler’s schema regarding gender with the
interwoven with the search for the authentic theory of hyperreality, the question of originality
examples of gender thereby allowing (or even becomes moot. Thus, rather than struggling
encouraging) a continual realignment with the under the unnecessary yoke of “correctness,” the
gender binary. As such, that Butler’s work seeks to notion of reality is completely removed from the
locate “the mechanism whereby sex is transformed currently existing gender labels that are applied
into gender is meant to establish not only the to individuals. Such a conflation of theoretical

46 Post Identity
Janani Subramanian, editor, Spectator 30:2 (Fall 2010): 46-56.
SICHLER
constructs reconfigures the hierarchal, value-laden detectable alteration between semblance and
conception of the oppositional and restrictive reality.”3 Additionally, the first order corresponded
forces known as masculine and feminine. Instead of to the “natural, naturalist, founded on the image,
a hierarchal order of gender based on preconceived on imitation and counterfeit, that are harmonious,
heternormative notions of gender, each gender optimistic, and that aim for the restitution or the
“copy” as enacted by a body in a place in time will ideal institution of nature made in God’s image.”4
in itself be primary, thereby owing no allegiance to Baudrillard highlights the deference exhibited by
earlier, heretofore considered primary, incarnations human beings in this period towards the ultimate
of gendered activity. creator (i.e. God) thereby providing definite
In order to achieve this conflation of boundaries for the counterfeit simulacra.
theoretical models, I will first introduce the Inherent in the first order, therefore, is a
theory of hyperreality as it has been developed in reverence for God and his creation(s). The referent
the works of Jean Baudrillard. Next, I will trace upon which the simulacra is based exists within
the trajectory upon which gender has traveled in the traditional, modern considerations of reality, as
works of Judith Butler including Gender Trouble: the simulacra is a “reflection of a profound reality.”5
Feminisms and the Subversion of Identity, Bodies Instead, humanity and their inanimate creations
that Matter: On the Discursive Limits of Sex, and exist in harmony with a world beneficently
Undoing Gender. Taking into consideration these bequeathed to them by a benevolent entity. Rather
two theoretical models, I will then offer a reading than working against or attempting to exceed the
that interjects Butler’s construction of gender into natural world around them, individuals in this
a hyperreal frame. period of perception create with respect in mind
for the natural world around them.
The Orders of Hyperreality Before the supplanting of the benevolent God
by the deity of production born of the Industrial
Within Baudrillard’s schema of hyperreality there Revolution, understanding, knowledge and
exists four orders of understanding: counterfeit, perception were quite different. Knowledge was
production, simulation, and virtual. Since the dawn based on faith, not empirical evidence that became
of the Italian Renaissance, humanity has been slowly the standard in the nineteenth century.6 According
and steadily working its way through the levels to Baudrillard:
of simulacra. As technologies have both evolved
and progressed, thereby making us ever more Before [the Industrial Era] nothing was
independent from the “natural” world, society’s produced, strictly speaking: everything
movement through the various orders of reality was deduced, from the grace (of God),
has been accelerated resulting in an ever shorter or beneficence (of nature) of an agency
grace period between the orders. Through these that offered or refused its wealth. Value
four stages, an understanding of the importance emanated from the reign of divine or
of humanity’s growing interconnectedness with natural qualities (for us in retrospect
not only the mechanization of life but also its these converge).7
growing dependence on our “mediated” lives can
be appreciated. Reality, and the simulacra emanating from it,
possessed inherent meaning thereby insuring
FIRST ORDER: Counterfeit inherent value. No exchange for sign or symbol
Beginning with the Italian Renaissance was necessary; meaning was a gift endowed by the
and continuing through to the beginning of the creator upon his creation(s) and flowed through
Industrial Revolution, the counterfeit order as the “creations’ creations.”
conceived by Baudrillard was the grounding force
in societal constructions of reality.2 The simulacra SECOND ORDER: Production
produced in “[t]he first-order simulacrum never By the beginning of the Industrial Era,
abolished difference. It supposes an always however, a shift or “revolution”8 occurred in the

POST IDENTITY 47
POST QUEERNESS
era that precipitated the instillation of the second While connections still existed to the referent,
order of simulacra known as production.9 The era of the earth-bound referent did not ultimately define
production realized the creation of “simulacra that the relations between the simulacra and its real-
are productive, productivist, founded on energy, world correspondent. In the world governed by
force, its materialization by the machine and in the law of production “there is the very possibility
the whole system of production--a Promethean of two or of n identical objects. The relations
aim of a continuous globalization and expansion, between them is not that of the original to its
of an indefinite liberation of energy.”10 Individuals counterfeit, or its analogue, or its reflection; it is
living in the Industrial Era attempted to re-make a relationship of equivalence, of indifference.”12
the work, or at least re-trace the steps, of God With its exact replicant existing side by side, the
and improve upon the natural, observable world simulacra (the reflection of reality) loses meaning.
around them. Advancement and “modernity” Instead of a miraculous gift from God, a copy is
were the order of the day, thereby instilling the a disposable thing. The individual simulacra are
desire in individuals to attempt to move beyond easily re-creatable and, thus, no different from
the perceived limitations of humanity. One need the last, or the next, incarnation. Unlike the first
only take into consideration the importance of order, inherent meaning does not reside within the
monument building, such as the Crystal Place simulacra or its referent.
in the United Kingdom and the Eiffel Tower in
France, which spotlighted both the wealth and THIRD ORDER: Simulation
growing technological prowess of the United The third level, simulation, corresponds to
States and Europe and realized the need to exceed the means of perception known as hyperreality
what had once been considered impossible. which reconfigures the post-modern condition
Even with the ever-exploding boundaries of and consciousness by removing the need for a
technology in the Industrial Era, individuals still referent or an original to exist prior to its copy in
continued to reproduce, not simulate, objects and the corporeal world. Simulation began at the end
events. Replication was the order of the day, as for, of the Industrial Era and reigned perceptions of
according to Baudrillard: reality until the very recent arrival of the virtual.13
Even without a definitive beginning and end
The second-order simulacra simplifies point in place, one can still discuss the postmodern
the problem [of reality] by the absorption condition of hyperreality. While theorists from
of appearances, or by the liquidations of Walter Benjamin forward have discussed the loss
the real, whichever. It establishes in any that occurs when a “real object” is reproduced,
case a reality, image, echo, appearance; hyperreality reconfigures the notion of loss so it
such is certainly work, the machine, becomes the loss of conventionally-held notions of
the system of industrial production reality. In Symbolic Exchange and Death, Baudrillard
in its entirety, in that it is radically writes “[t]he modern sign dreams of the sign
opposed to the principle of theatrical anterior to it and fervently desires, in its reference
illusion. No more resemblance or lack to the real, to rediscover some binding obligation.
of resemblance of God, or human being, But it finds only a reason: a referential reason,
but an imminent logic of the operational the real - the ‘natural’ on which it will feed.”14
principle.11 The loss is not only felt by the viewer/receiver of
the sign but the sign/simulacra itself. Without a
With the rise of the machine and production, the support structure, the copy may easily fall into a
simple crudity of man-made simulacra quickly void of meaninglessness as an actual object on this
slipped away. While an original referent in reality metaphysical plane is no longer necessary.
was still essential to the productions of simulacra In one of the more tangible critiques of
in the second order, the simulacra moved ever Baudrillard, Richard Lane defined this “simulacra
closer to perfectly representing “the real” as well as of simulations” as producing “a reality of its own,
creating simulacra en masse. without being based upon any particular bit of the

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real world.” What this means is that an object or
15
Ducks the queston of origins; it cultivates
an event can exist prior to having a corresponding no origin or mythical authenticity; it has
referent in the physical world. As conceived by no past and no founding truth. Having
Baudrillard, known no primitive accumulation of
time, it lives in a perpetual present.
Here we are in the third-order simulacra; Having seen no slow, centuries-long
no longer that of the counterfeit of an accumulation of a principle of truth,
original as in the first-order, nor that of it lives in perpetual simulation, in a
the pure series in the second. Here are perpetual present of signs.18
the models from which proceed all forms
according to the modulation of their Without the weight of historical tradition or
differences. […] We are in simulation “founding truths” as is present for older, more
in the modern sense of the word, of established nations, America and its citizens
which industrialization is but the final (Baudrillard’s masses) simulate an existence
manifestation. Finally, it is not serial that lacks an historical precedent. As America
reproducibility which is fundamental, “ducks” the issue of origins, it re-confirms its
but the modulation. Not quantitative status as a nation living in a hyperreal state, for
equivalences but distinctive oppositions.16 the “nothing” gave birth to it nor is it a copy
of anything else that existed previously. It was
We are no longer exchanging the real for a conceived in the minds of men; the purest form
reproduction, but creating a real, a “reproduction,” of hyperreality.
a simulacra all by ourselves with no help from To that end, America is the land of hyperreality
mommy, daddy, or (ultimately) God. and Disneyland. Disneyland: a world produced
Baudrillard, in one of the more grounded out of the insubstantial matter of dreams, wishes
sections of Simulations and Simulacra, has an and fairy tales and now driven and buoyed up
essay entitled “The China Syndrome.” The piece by the need to need, the desire to desire. In his
describes the events that took place on the screen book Simulations, Baudrillard explains the appeal
in 1979, in the film The China Syndrome, and in of Disneyland and how it correlates to the post-
“real-life” news reports that followed the almost modern American existence. Thus:
incident that took place at Pennsylvania’s nuclear
energy plant known as Three Mile Island. To But what draws the crowds is
Baudrillard, “the real corresponded point by point undoubtedly much more the social
to the simulacrum, including the suspended, microcosm, the miniaturized and
incomplete character of the catastrophe, which religious reveling in real America, in
is essential from the point of view of deterrence: its delights and drawbacks. You park
the real arranged itself, in the image of the outside, queue up inside, and are totally
film, to produce a simulacrum of catastrophe.”17 abandoned at the exit. In this imaginary
Taking into consideration the practical concerns world the only phantasmagoria is in the
of filmmaking including writing the screenplay, inherent warmth and affection of the
casting the parts and designing the set, it is crowd, and in that sufficiently excessive
obvious that the “reality” of Three Mile Island was number of gadgets used there to
imagined by the creators of The China Syndrome specifically maintain the multitudinous
well before the “real” event occurred. affect. The contrast with the absolute
To fully understand the theory of solitude of the parking lot--a veritable
hyperreality, one must consider it in terms of the concentration camp--is total. Or
United States of America. Unlike the continents rather: inside, a whole range of gadgets
of Europe, Asia and Africa, the United States of magnetize the crowd into direct flows--
America is its own creation. America is a new, outside, solitude is directed onto a single
shiny land that: gadget: the automobile.19

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To Baudrillard, Disneyland represents what hyperreal. Gane alludes to the inherent tension
the hyperreal American is; a nation defined by when he writes:
excess and the contradictory feelings of extreme
familiarity and togetherness coupled with the The problem is that for the reader of
ultimate solitude in a little metal box. It is the thesis of the fourth order is, as a
the world of Disneyland, however, that most conception and definition, still in statu
fully exemplifies the third order of simulacra in nascendi. Just as Baudrillard’s theory of
Baudrillard’s conception of hyperreality, for it is a hyperreality (and the end of the social)
world, a thing, a reality that came into being on our took over a decade to be seen as having
plane of existence with no physically incarnated caught the shift that has occurred in our
antecedents. societies, something of the same disbelief
hangs over this thesis.22
FOURTH ORDER: Virtual
America, Disneyland and all of its inhabitants Thus, to fully critique the essence and extent of
are now moving away from the third order of the virtual is quite difficult, for discussions on the
simulacra and are now entering a new world: third order of simulation are difficult enough to
the virtual. Instead of the paradigm of human comprehend. When considering a concept like
existence put forth by William Shakespeare reality that, on the one hand seems so tangible,
several centuries ago that equated man to actors yet defies easy definitions, debate on the nature of
on a stage, “we no longer exist as playwrights or reality can ultimately be unsatisfying.
actors but as terminals of multiple networks.”20 The The importance of the concept for
flesh and bone and blood so central to our personal contemporary society, however, recommends the
understanding of reality has been replaced by USB virtual for at least a consideration as the fourth order
cords, Ethernet cords and satellite television that of reality. According to Baudrillard, “the image can
keeps us connected to the ultimate of conclusion no longer imagine the real, because it is the real. It
of the trajectory of the hyperreal condition: the can no longer dream it, since it is its virtual reality. It
virtual. Instead of inhabiting the role of creator, is as though things had swallowed their own mirrors
individuals are now receptacles for the simulacra and have become transparent to themselves, entirely
that constitute reality. present to themselves in a ruthless transcription.”23
Baudrillard has not yet definitively declared While this definition reads very similarly to that of
the historical event that marks the end of the hyperreality, the difference between the two orders
simulation and begins the virtual. For simulacra comes about not in the genesis of the image but what
in the virtual stage of existence, however, “there is happens after the image is created. In hyperreality,
no longer any equivalence natural or general. Also, the image/simulacra is born without referent in the
there is not any law of value as such, dialectical or real world, yet the simulacra produced from the
structural. There remains only a sort of epidemic hyperreal moment give birth to the referent in the
of value, a general metastasis of value; a sort of “real” or “unmediated” world.
proliferation and problematic dispersal.”21 With The virtual conception of reality, however, has no
the removal of the need for a referent, the simulacra need and in fact demands a lack of a corresponding
produced under the fourth order lack any intrinsic referent in reality either before or after its realization.
value or inherent meaning. The sheer number of With the growing power of the virtual, the
simulacra broadcasts and ultimately erodes all self- traditional sense of reality loses power and meaning.
contained, inherent meaning. In Impossible Exchange, Baudrillard writes:
Yet, the third order of reality has not yet
completely let go of its hold on contemporary When the world, or reality, finds its
society. In his piece entitled “Bathos of artificial equivalent in the virtual, it
Technology and Politics in Fourth Order becomes useless. When the only thing
Simulacra,” Mike Gane attempts to make sense needed to reproduce the species is
of the nature of the virtual in relation to the cloning, sex becomes a useless function….

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When artificial memories reign
supreme, our organic memories become
superfluous (they are, in fact, gradually
disappearing). When everything takes
place between interactive terminals on
the communication screen, the Other has
becomes a useless function.24

One need only consider the Internet and the nature


of online and offline senses of reality and existence
to see how the virtual enters our lives. The lines
between mediated and corporeal experiences become
blurred. According to Sherry Turkle, “[a]s human
beings become increasingly intertwined with the
technology and with each other via technology, old
distinctions between what is specifically human
and specifically technological becomes more
complex.”25 Defining identity in the virtual age,
therefore, has evolved into both a more nuanced
and fractured process with the conflation of
technology and self in one body.

Contemporary Gendering
In her groundbreaking treatise on gender, Judith
Butler embarked upon a course, which set out to or both. By both naming and questioning the
trouble tightly held beliefs regarding the state and foundational beliefs associated with gender, Butler
“nature” of gender. According to Butler, Gender questioned the nature of being and reality in the
Trouble was written: contemporary context.
While a tangible definition of gender remains
To show that the naturalized knowledge of elusive in Gender Trouble, Butler imparts to the
gender operates as a preemptive and violent reader ideas as to the multiple possibilities of what
circumscription of reality. To the extent gender may be and become. Inexorably intertwined
the gender norms (ideal dimorphism, with Butler’s conception of gender is the trope
heterosexual complimentarity of bodies, of performativity. Not to be confused with the
ideals and rule of proper and improper singular or isolated notion of a “performance,”
masculinity and femininity, many of performativity suggests a seemingly unceasing
which are underwritten by racial codes of action in which a body enacts gender on multiple
purity and taboos against miscegenation) levels of consciousness. When attempting to
establish what will and will not be provide an understanding of gender, Butler writes:
intelligibly human, what will and will not
be considered to be ‘real,’ they establish Gender is not a noun, but neither is it
the ontological field in which bodies may a set of free-floating attributes, for we
be given legitimate expression.26 have seen that the substantive effect of
gender is performatively produced and
With the burden of such value-laden convictions compelled by the regulatory practices of
weighing upon gender, it appears that any attempts gender coherence…gender is always a
problematize commonly held views of gender doing, though not a doing by a subject
would be views as either radical, implausible who might be said to preexist the deed.27

POST IDENTITY 51
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Neither discernable as a list of adjectives nor a course of Gender Trouble the body remains elusive.
concrete entity existing on our corporeal plane, Gender either resides outside or on the body or
rather, gender has become a verb, a state of as an act experienced by the “Other,” but it never
being one inhabits. Butler’s aforementioned intersects with the sexed form the body inhabits.
definition refuses to provide a tangible point of Divorced from this mortal coil, gender exists
departure as gender, as conceived by Butler, itself only in our perception of the performative act as
lacks any concrete attachments or well-defined evidenced in others.
boundaries. Butler reconfigured the discussion of gender
The concept of free-flowing construction of to include the physical body in Bodies that Matter
gender is reiterated throughout Gender Trouble. by troubling the notion of the impenetrable
Butler engages this active, ethereal view of gender biologically sexed body. While the sex of an
when writing: individual appears to be unquestionable, Butler
relocates the construction of sex to the domain
Gender is an identity tenuously of the social. In the introduction to Bodies that
constituted in time, instituted in an Matter, Butler defines
exterior space through a stylized repetition
of acts. The effect of gender is produced A regulatory ideal whose materialization
through the stylization of the body and, is compelled, and this materialization
hence, must be understood as the mundane takes place (or fails to take place) through
way in which bodily gestures, movements certain highly regulated practices. In
and styles of various kinds constitute the other words, “sex” is an ideal construct
illusion of an abiding gendered self.28 which is forcibly materialized through
time… “Sex” is, thus, not simply what one
As the construction of gender only fleetingly exists has, or a static description of what one is:
in a particular time and place, defining gendered it will be one of the norms by which the
behavior becomes the domain of culture: an equally “one” becomes viable at all, that which
ambiguous term. Gender, while informing and qualifies a body for life within the domain
affecting identity, becomes an action of the self of cultural intelligibility.30
but not born of the “real” self. As an action, gender
becomes disengaged with the belief that gender is What we conceive of as male and female, thus, has
an essential or that there exists a true nature of a come into being through the “will” of socializing
gendered being. forces. Butler uses the Lacanian notion of “law”
In Gender Trouble, gender never becomes and the Foucauldian conception of power to
incorporated into the physical body. Gender, explain how said social forces work.
instead, resides Since sex, now a social norm, lacks a material
presence, the discussion concerning the body has
on the surface of the body, through the become centered about the body. For Butler, the
play of signifying absences that suggest, human physical terrain is problematic for
but never reveal, the organizing principle
of identity as a cause. Such acts, gestures, To invoke matter is to invoke a
enactments, generally construed, are sedimented history of sexual hierarchy
performative in the sense that the essence and sexual erasures which should surely
or identity that they otherwise purport to be an object of feminist inquiry, but
express are fabrications manufactured and which would be quite problematic as a
sustained through corporeal signs and ground of feminist theory. To return to
other discursive means.29 matter requires that we return to matter
as a sign which in its redoublings and
Only through communicating with society does contradictions enacts an inchoate drama
a body become a “gendered” entity. Through the of sexual difference.31

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Sex as a sign reconfigures sex as without either
intrinsic value or meaning. Although such a reading
may be troubling, Butler’s inquiry into the “nature”
of the gendered body relies heavily upon the ways
in which the male and female physical incarnations
are read.
Gendered space is divided into masculine and
feminine performative activity in which the male
gendered body rides atop the hierarchal power
structure. The feminine is marked with “privation
and castration…the very figuration of that threat
[castration] and, hence, is produced as a lack only in
relation to the masculine subject.”32 The masculine,
however, is the gender of abundance. Instead of a
subject position, “[t]he symbolic position that marks
a sex as masculine is said to ‘have’ the phallus; it is
one that compels through the threat of punishment,
that is, the threat of feminization, an imaginary
and, hence, inadequate identification.”33 By having
the phallus, the masculine exercises social power.
While the trope of the phallus is troubled by the
tendency to conflate it with the biological penis,
thereby creating a scenario in which biology appears
to be the genesis of the seat of power, the phallus,
like all elements in the construction of gender, is
born of social identity. As such, the binary remains
“grounded” in the realm of a constructed norm. actions, Butler once again reconfigures the
In Undoing Gender, the dialogue no longer discussion. Gender becomes a process disengaged
concerns providing evidence for the assertion that from the value-ridden forms it may take. While this
either gender or sex is a norm. Butler, in a radical argument may appear less aggressive or too similar
departure from her previous works, elucidates the to the views put forward in her previous works, this
ways in which the aforementioned norms are and “mechanized” view of genders moves beyond gender
can be “undone.” Butler provides a definition for as it was conceived in either Gender Trouble or Bodies
the meaning of gender as a norm when she writes: that Matter. By presenting gender as a “apparatus,”
minute meaningless distinctions are done away with
Gender is the apparatus by which in favor of a free-floating abstract notion, thereby
the production and normalization of allowing gender to be “unmade.”
masculine and feminine takes place along Butler illustrates several ways in which gender
with the interstitial forms of hormonal, can be said to be unmade or undone. Whether an
chromosomal, psychic, and performative individual is labeled as a transsexual, transgendered,
that gender assumes…Gender is intersexed or in any other way “queer,” a form of
the mechanism by which notions of gendered activity is enacted. Although Butler
masculine and feminine are produced and does admit that by enacting these alternative/non
naturalized, but gender might very well normative genders as body may be named “unreal,”
be the apparatus by which such terms are it is via the citational performative that such genders
deconstructed and denaturalized.34 gain social currency. Butler writes:

Instead of a fixation on the ways in which the One surely cites norms that already exist,
gender binary plays out in masculine or feminine but these norms can be significantly

POST IDENTITY 53
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deterritorialized through citation. They either the first or second order of reality within
can also be exposed as non-natural and the hyperreal model. The queer copies are thus
nonnecessary when they take place in a perceived as little more than cheap knockoffs of
context and through a form of embodying “straight” or properly gendered/ sexual behavior.
that defines normative expectation.35 Butler, like Baudrillard, calls into question the
semiotic value of origin and reality. However, for
Although Butler provides a prospect for change Baudrillard in the third and fourth orders of reality
in this refigured performativity, such activity often the signified rather than the signifier possesses the
comes at a personal price in terms of cultural label of “original” thus valued. Butler, by contrast,
intelligibility. imbues the queer copy with value but remains
within the heternormative structure. In Undoing
Hyperreal Gender Gender, Butler describes her original foray into
gender by the following:
One of the main issues confronting queerly
gendered bodies/individuals concerns the lack Categories like butch and femme were not
of admission to cultural intelligibility by the copies of a more original heterosexuality,
heteronormative mindset dominating mainstream but they showed how the so-called
culture, resulting in social invisibility or a lack of originals, men and women within
acknowledgement. Queer bodies hover outside the the heterosexual frame, are similarly
power structure of society due to their perceived constructed, performatively established.
lack of “realness” or “originality” within the So the ostensible copy is not explained
heternormative social structure. By maintaining through reference to the origin, but the
a biblically-inspired emphasis on the reproductive origin is understood to be as performative
aspect of sexuality and the corresponding gendered as the copy.37
performances, queer bodies are not permitted to
communicate or engage with the current normative While assigning value to queer bodies, Butler’s
standards as created, established and maintained paradigm still requires the signifier to be
by the dyadic, mainstream gender structure. intelligible. Under the rubric of either simulation
By relying on a social structure that or virtual reality, the signified takes precedence as
emphasizes the true or original in assessing worth, the signifier either appears after the copy is realized
bodies/individuals exhibiting/performing a queer (in the third order) or never materializes at all (in
or non-normative gender cannot communicate the fourth order).
within the same heternormative arena due to a lack By resignifying the understanding of copy,
of common ground. In Butler’s estimation: therefore, an empowered view of gender can be
achieved. Butler admits in her essay “Imitation and
Gender reality is created through gender insubordination,” that “gender is a kind of
sustained social performances means that imitation for which there is no original; in fact, it is
the very notions of an essential sex and a a kind of imitation that produces the very notion
true or abiding masculinity or femininity of the original as an effect and consequence of the
are also constituted as part of the strategy imitation itself.”38 Thus, placing it in the interstitial
that conceals gender’s performative space between the third/simulation and fourth/
character and the performative virtual orders of reality becomes a natural extension
possibilities for proliferating gender of Butler’s view of gender. As an “original” form
configurations outside the restricting does not exist for gender, the multiple copies,
frames of masculinist domination and which are promulgated by the individual bodies,
compulsory heterosexuality.36 are, in fact, primary expressions of gender.
When one returns to the performative or
By emphasizing an essentialist view, such active element of gender, another hyperreal
assessments locate the gender norm within aspect comes to forefront. Due to the constant

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reconstruction or resignification in every act of are arguing with the structure that makes
gender, each movement, look or moment creates their argument possibility.40
a new, minutely different creation. Butler, in
“Variations on sex and gender,” also emphasizes By taking up the argument with our seemingly
the mobile appearance of gender when she writes: impenetrable corporeal selves, critics like Judith
Butler cause us to call into question the ways in
Gender is not traceable to a definable which our bodies exist in the world.
origin because it itself is an originating The construct of hyperreal gender can be
activity incessantly taking place. No applied to multiple avenues of critical inquiry.
longer understood as a product of cultural With the continuing importance of cyber theory
and psychic relations long past, gender is a both by itself and in tandem with queer theory,
contemporary way of organizing past and hyperreal gender can be used to describe how
future cultural norms, a way of situating bodies are gendered in the non-territorial plane
oneself in and through those norms, an of existence. Instead of viewing the cyber realm
active style of living of one’s body in the as the region of pure fantasy, hyperreal gender can
world.39 buoy up the concept of multiple regions of “real”
identity. Additionally, construing the multitude
By ensconcing the temporal condition of gender of queer (femme/butch, intersexed, transgendered,
in either the present or future, gender can dislodge transsexual and all of the points in-between)
itself from the historical sediment that burdens it. genders as hyperreal genders confers agency
and an immediate sense of “reality” upon those
Conclusion individuals, without having to maneuver through
the heteronormative structure by the dismantling
Any attacks on gender, regardless of the structure of said hierarchical structure.
of reality one employs, occupy a difficult position While the idea of hyperreal gender may be
in society. According to Butler: considered as problematic, or possibly more so,
than the two ideas separately, such a model has
The structuring reality of sexual difference the ability to not only trouble but give a sense of
is not one that one can wish away or argue cultural intelligibility to bodies once denied such
against, or even make claims about in any a voice. In removing the limiting boundaries of
reasonable way. It is more like a necessary conventionally conceived reality, gendered bodies
background to the possibility of thinking, can be understood on their own terms without
of language, of being a body in the world. the weight of a non-existent original hanging over
And those who seek to take issue with it them.

Karen Sichler is a Ph.D. candidate in Mass Communications and a graduate teaching assistant for the
Institute of Women’s Studies at the University of Georgia. She is working on her dissertation entitled
“Making a killing: The online murderabilia market and freedom of speech.”

End Notes

1 Judith Butler, Gender Trouble: Feminism and the Subversion of Identity (New York and London: Routledge, 1999), 48.
2 Jean Baudrillard, Simulations, translated by Paul Foss, Paul Patton and Philip Beitchman (n.p.: Semiotext [e], 1983), 83.
3 Baudrillard, Simulations, 94-95.
4 Jean Baudrillard, Simulacra and Simulations, translated by Sheila Faria Glaser (Ann Arbor, MI: The University of Michigan Press,
1994), 121.
5 Baudrillard, Simulacra and Simulations, 6.

POST IDENTITY 55
POST QUEERNESS
6 In his seminal work The Structure of Scientific Revolutions, Thomas Kuhn elaborates this idea of the power of paradigm shifts when
he writes “paradigm changes do cause scientists to see the world of their research-engagement differently. In so far as their only
recourse to that world is through what they see and do, we may want to say that after a revolution scientists are responding to a
different world (111).” Thomas Kuhn, The Structure of Scientific Revolutions (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1996).
7 Jean Baudrillard, “Symbolic Exchange and Death,” in Jean Baudrillard: Selected Writings, edited by Mark Poster, translated by
Charles Levin (Stanford: Stanford University Press, 2001), 131-132. (emphasis in original)
8 In “Symbolic Exchange and Death,” Jean Baudrillard writes “A revolution separates each order from the next one: these are the
true revolutions” (124).
9 Baudrillard, Simulations, 83.
10 Baudrillard, Simulacra and Simulations, 121.
11 Baudrillard, Simulations, 95.
12 Baudrillard, “Symbolic Exchange and Death,” 140.
13 Baudrillard, Simulations, 83.
14 Baudrillard, “Symbolic Exchange and Death,” 139. (emphasis in original)
15 Richard J. Lane, Jean Baudrillard, Routledge Critical Thinkers, Essential Guides for Literary Studies, ed. Robert Eaglestone,
(London & New York: 2000), 30.
16 Baudrillard, Simulations, 100-101.
17 Baudrillard, Simulacra and Simulation, 54. (emphasis added)
18 Jean Baudrillard, America, translated by Chris Turner (London and New York: Verso, 1989), 76.
19 Baudrillard, Simulations, 23-24. (emphasis in original)
20 Jean Baudrillard, The Ecstasy of Communication, edited by Sylvère Loronger, translated by Bernard Schutze and Caroline Schutze
(New York: Semiotext(e), 1988), 16.
21 Jean Baudrillard, “Transpolitics, Transsexuality, Transaesthetics,” in Jean Baudrillard: The Disappearance of Art and Politics, edited
by William Stears and William Chaloupka, translated by Michel Valentin (New York: St. Martin’s Press, 1992), 15-16.
22 Mike Gane, “Bathos of Technology and Politics in Fourth Order Simulacra,” Angelaki: journal of the theoretical humanities, 4,
no 2 (1999),76.
23 Jean Baudrillard, The Perfect Crime, translated by Chris Turner (London and New York: Verso, 1996), 4.
24 Jean Baudrillard, Impossible Exchange, translated by Chris Turner (London and New York: Verso, 2001), 40.
25 Sherry Turkle, Life on the Screen: Identity in the Age of the Internet (New York: Touchstone/Simon & Schuster, 1995), 21.
26 Butler, Gender Trouble, xxiii.
27 Ibid., 33.
28 Ibid., 179. (emphasis in original)
29 Ibid., 173. (emphasis in original)
30 Judith Butler, Bodies that Matter: On the Discursive Limits of Sex (New York and London: Routledge, 1993), 1-2.
31 Ibid., 49. (emphasis in original)
32 Ibid., 102.
33 Ibid., 101.
34 Judith Butler, Undoing Gender (New York: Routledge, 2004), 42.
35 Ibid., 218.
36 Butler, Gender Trouble, 180.
37 Butler, Undoing Gender, 209.
38 Judith Butler, “Imitation and Gender Insubordination,” in The Judith Butler Reader, ed. Sara Salih and Judith Butler (Malden,
MA: Blackwell Publishing, 2004), 128. (emphases in original)
39 Judith Butler, “Variations on Sex and Gender,” in The Judith Butler Reader, ed. Sara Salih and Judith Butler (Malden, MA:
Blackwell Publishing, 2004), 26.
40 Butler, Undoing Gender, 176.

56 FALL 2010

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