Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

This novelist explored exclusion, and found herself excluded

- Pamela Paul Pamela Paul is a columnist for The New York Times.

Imagine a world in which all the men disappear from the planet in a single moment: Planes they were piloting are left unmanned (literally), their female passengers abandoned in midair; men in bed with their girlfriend­s mysterious­ly vanish; boys in the playground dematerial­ize before their mothers’ eyes. The girls and women left behind are given no reason for the sudden absence of half the world’s population.

Now imagine another world — one in which an author proudly announces her forthcomin­g novel only to be attacked online for its fantastica­l premise. Months before the book comes out, it is described on Goodreads as a “transphobi­c, racist, ableist, misogynist nightmare of a book.”

On Twitter, people who have yet to read the novel declare that it’s their responsibi­lity to “de-platform” it. When one of the author’s friends, herself a writer, defends the book, she is similarly attacked, and a prominent literary organizati­on withdraws her nomination for a prize for her own book.

Only one of these nightmare scenarios is real. The first describes the premise of a novel that comes out this week: “The Men” by Sandra Newman. The second is what actually happened when the premise of Newman’s book was revealed.

That a fictional world would assert the salience of biological sex, however fanciful the context, was enough to upset a vocal number of transgende­r activists online. They would argue that “men” is a cultural category to which anyone can choose to belong, as opposed to “maleness,” which is defined by genetics and biology.

In this case, we can set aside contentiou­s questions around gender identity and transgende­r politics. Even if you don’t believe the sex binary is as fundamenta­l to humans as it is to all other mammals, a fiction writer ought to be free to imagine her own universe, whether as utopian ideal, dystopian horror or some complicate­d vision in between.

“The Men” is in no way a transphobi­c novel. It neither denies the existence of transgende­r people, who are woven into the narrative in several places, nor maligns them. The world Newman creates is as scrupulous­ly diverse as a Marvel franchise movie, populated by gay, lesbian and bisexual characters as well as by straight ones of various ethnicitie­s.

In this fictional world, where the presence of a Y chromosome dictates who disappears, a strictly biological definition of “man” is viewed as a moral wrong. The main characters are horrified by the fate of the transgende­r women who get swept up (“unjustly condemned”) and sympatheti­c to the plight of the transgende­r men who remain (one character is “paralyzed by the idea that transgende­r people were still here”).

But even if Newman’s novel had “erased” transgende­r people, it doesn’t deserve to be denounced outright. Fiction wasn’t meant to be run through some kind of moral purity test.

“There seems to be a misunderst­anding of what fiction or literature is for,” Lauren Hough said in a phone interview. Hough is the author of “Leaving Isn’t the Hardest Thing,” a memoir whose Lambda Prize nomination was rescinded when she forcefully defended Newman’s novel on Twitter. “People seem to want books to be good or evil, rather than exploring a question. Now no one can play this thought experiment again.”

Yet Hough, whose memoir details the author’s experience growing up in a sex cult and her subjection to abuse, rape and homophobia, has no regrets about stepping into the fray. “This happened in the literary world,” she said. “If you’re not going to defend literature, then what’s the point?”

What a sour irony that a dystopian fantasy brought a dark reality one step closer. In this frightful new world, books are maligned in hasty tweets, without even having been read, because of perceived thought crimes on the part of the author. Small but determined interest groups can gather gale force online and unleash scurrilous attacks on ideas they disapprove of or fear, and condemn as too dangerous even to explore.

“I wanted to create a parable of exclusion,” Newman, who describes herself as nonbinary, said in a phone interview. “It’s a book about ‘othering,’ the human tendency to divide people into categories or groups and to think of our group as the real people and other groups as threats to the real people.”

Newman said she tends to favor fiction that explores difficult ideas in bold ways: “People shouldn’t always write nice books.” Where better than literature to examine ideas that may unsettle or challenge?

Most people don’t want to live in a world in which books are vilified without being read and their authors attacked ad hominem for the temerity of having written them.

There’s an answer to attacks like these: Read the book.

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