Nature, Culture, and Gender: A Critique
A conceptual book responding to the question "is rebellion dead?" It shows how rebellion is alive through gender expression.
This book is the result of a semester long research project at Central Saint Martins.
Three texts are combined to explore the diversity of gender expression by exposing the dichotomy between institutionalized and individual perspectives on gender.
The first text is a scientific article that represents the traditional binary perspective of gender. This dictates the formatting of the book, showing how these narratives shape our culture.
A journal in the format of footnotes represents the individual experience of gender and serve to break up the structure of the traditional narrative.
The third voice uses the Eames: Power of Ten video to bridge the gap between the scientific and lived experience. Added photography indicates how ridiculous it is to police gender expression.