Writer and researcher Pooja Mittal Biswas, will see her next book out this coming February: Gendering Time, Timing Gender: The Deconstruction of Gender in Time Travel Fiction. Delving into gender studies, queer theory and literary studies, the book offers a comprehensive and entertaining analysis of how time and gender intersect in speculative fiction.

About Gendering Time, Timing Gender.

Gendering Time, Timing Gender: The Deconstruction of Gender in Time Travel Fiction is a book that investigates how time travel has been used to deconstruct gender and sex in speculative fiction.

Specifically, it investigates how the dismantling of the past/future binary is utilised in the dismantling of the male/female gender binary in three different time travel narratives: Orlando by Virginia Woolf, ‘All You Zombies’ by Robert A. Heinlein and The Unintentional Time Traveler by Everett Maroon.

These works feature protagonists whose gender identities are inextricably bound with time itself. As they move through time, their sex and gender identity changes. Time and gender are depicted as non-binary, with society imposing a socially-constructed binary on that which transcends binaries altogether. The narratological shifts involved in the representation of time travel create a deconstructive counter-dialogic against heteronormativity that resists and gradually, subversively erodes not only the temporal binary opposition of ‘past’ and ‘future,’ but also the heteronormative binary of ‘male’ and ‘female.’

In The Unintentional Time Traveler and Orlando, time travel naturalises the process of gender change, with the passage of time to the past and to the future transforming the protagonist into another gender and into another sex. In the short story ‘All You Zombies,’ the destabilisation of temporal continuity simultaneously disrupts the protagonist’s gender continuity, and aids in the reader’s suspension of disbelief that such disruptions can occur.

All three narratives begin from the perspective of a seemingly heterosexual, cisgender male protagonist. The protagonist’s gender identity is then deconstructed through time travel. Thus, the origin of each story is the heteronormative status quo, which then unwinds and expands outwards into less limited notions of gender. Combining queer theory with literary theory, the book explores what the deconstruction of binary gender means and where it leads.

Pooja Mittal Biswas was born in Nigeria to Indian parents and has lived in several countries. She is now pursuing a PhD in English from the University of Sydney, Australia. Biswas holds a Master of Research degree in Creative Writing from Macquarie University and teaches Novel Writing at the University of Sydney’s Centre for Continuing Education. Her research interests include postgenderism in speculative fiction, the literary deconstruction of the gender binary, the intersection of postcolonialism and queer theory, the literature of the South Asian diaspora, and creative writing pedagogy.

Biswas is the author of five books. She has been reviewed and interviewed in The Age, The Australian and ABC Radio’s The Book Show, and has been anthologised in both The Best Australian Poems and The Best Australian Poetry. Biswas has written for Writer’s Digest and has been widely published in literary journals such as Meanjin, Hecate and Jacket. She was also selected as a national representative for UNESCO’s Babele Poetica project.

Pre-order the book through the Luna Press Publishing website, or through the usual retailers.


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