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Gender, Mask and the Face: Towards a Corporeal Ethics

In: Revealing and Concealing Gender

Author

Listed:
  • Alison Pullen

    (UTS)

  • Carl Rhodes

    (University of Technology)

Abstract

The processes of revealing and concealing gender are easily taken for granted as a simple matter of considering something as being either exposed or covered up such that it might at times be more visible and at other times less visible. Here, revelation is associated with the uncovering of something that exists beneath that which is over it. The very idea of the revealing and concealing of gender already implies the donning or removal of a mask. To reveal — quite literally to lower or remove the veil that masks the face — is to show the face so that its bearer can be seen without obscurity or adornment. Such a consideration of gender as something subject to potential revelation suggests a performance where gender can be surfaced and hidden, highlighted and suppressed, overt and covert, processual and fixed. Countering such a view, this chapter argues that rather being something that might be concealed or revealed (i.e. through the donning or removal of a mask) gender is itself a mask. Here gender is not something that can be revealed so as to be known, but is that which does the concealing. On this basis we ask our central question: what lies beneath when the gendered mask is removed?

Suggested Citation

  • Alison Pullen & Carl Rhodes, 2010. "Gender, Mask and the Face: Towards a Corporeal Ethics," Palgrave Macmillan Books, in: Patricia Lewis & Ruth Simpson (ed.), Revealing and Concealing Gender, chapter 12, pages 233-248, Palgrave Macmillan.
  • Handle: RePEc:pal:palchp:978-0-230-28557-6_13
    DOI: 10.1057/9780230285576_13
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    Cited by:

    1. Lara Owen, 2022. "Stigma, sustainability, and capitals: A case study on the menstrual cup," Gender, Work and Organization, Wiley Blackwell, vol. 29(4), pages 1095-1112, July.

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