The philosopher Judith Butler has become one of the most powerful voices in the global conversation around gender, freedom, and resistance. In a world where LGBTQ+ rights are under increasing threat, Butler asks the urgent question: Do we want to live with an open or a closed heart?
Their name has long been synonymous with radical thought, particularly within feminist, queer, and trans theory. But as they continue to speak out against authoritarianism and cultural backlash—like in their recent interview with LiFO—Butler proves that their insights are more relevant than ever.
What is gender ideology and why is it a “phantom”?
Judith Butler defines the term “gender ideology” as a mythical construct—a phantom created and manipulated by those who feel threatened by gender diversity. This term, they argue, isn’t grounded in scholarship or reality. Instead, it’s wielded like a weapon, used by conservatives and reactionary forces to demonize feminism, queer theory, and especially trans and nonbinary lives.
Butler refuses to accept the framing that this is simply a “reaction” to progress. For them, it’s a deliberate culture of erasure. When governments attempt to eliminate gender studies or restrict trans rights, they’re not responding to something—they’re trying to reinstate a lost world order built on rigid binaries and patriarchal control.
Why does Butler believe in an open-hearted society?
At the heart of Butler’s vision is a simple but profound idea: human complexity deserves to be affirmed, not suppressed. An open-hearted society, as they describe it, is one where we embrace people in all their gendered and sexual diversity. It’s a society that welcomes trans youth, queer refugees, intersex bodies, and those who don’t conform to normative ideals.
This isn’t just an emotional metaphor—it’s a political call to action. Do we want to close our hearts in fear and hatred, or open them in solidarity and love?
Can the left really afford to ignore gender and identity?
Critics often argue that contemporary leftist politics have strayed too far into “identity issues,” losing sight of class and economic justice. But Butler flips that argument on its head. For them, gender is a framework for understanding inequality. The same structures that exploit labor also criminalize queer existence. Trans and queer migrants don’t experience oppression in isolation—they face systemic violence at every intersection.
To imagine justice without acknowledging gender, race, and sexuality, Butler argues, is to leave people behind. It’s not a distraction. It’s the map.
Is feminism in danger of becoming less inclusive?
The rise of TERFs and SWERFs—those who invoke feminism to exclude trans people or sex workers—is deeply concerning to Butler. In their view, these movements resurrect biological essentialism in the name of “protecting” women. But what about trans women? What about queer femmes? What about anyone whose body doesn’t fit a narrow, outdated mold?
Butler believes that no one owns gender, and no one has the right to gatekeep it. The real feminist struggle is against state violence, economic precarity, and patriarchal control—not against each other.
How can we fight authoritarianism and stay hopeful?
Butler doesn’t sugarcoat the state of the world. They name the threats clearly: fascist passions, ecological devastation, rising nationalism, and systemic violence. But they also see hope—in grassroots coalitions, transnational solidarity, and the growing recognition that our struggles are interconnected.
If we want a future where queer and trans lives thrive, it will take more than tolerance. It will take courage, humility, and collective resistance.
As Butler said in Athens, in a moment that lingers long after the applause fades: We must decide—do we want to live with an open heart, or a closed one?