Opinion Dune's Paul Atreides should be non-binary - Troon spergs about Dune

Dune’s Paul Atreides Should Be Non-Binary
Emmet Asher-Perrin
Thu Apr 16, 2020 12:00pm
If you have read Dune or watched any of its on-screen iterations, then you know all about Paul Atreides. The son of Duke Leto and Lady Jessica, trained in the Bene Gesserit ways, adopted by the fremen of Arrakis to become the legendary Muad’Dib. Paul is the culmination of a deeply unsettling eugenics program to create something called the Kwisatz Haderach, a being who can see into the future and project himself backwards and forwards in time.
And he could have been science fiction’s best known non-binary protagonist.

According to the plot of Dune, the Kwisatz Haderach had to be created via millennia of special breeding directives from the Bene Gesserit sisterhood. The all-female organization was working toward what all great shadowy organizations work toward—absolute power, namely their own puppet on the throne as emperor. Wrapped up in this desire was also a long-standing problem; spice offered the sisterhood some prescience and race memory, with the Reverend Mothers capable of looking back in time through the line of other sisters… but they could not access the male knowledge and experience in their past. It was believed that the Kwisatz Haderach would be able to look into their full history, both sides of their race memory, and also to see far into the future.
This figure was meant to arrive a generation after Paul—his mother was supposed to have a daughter who would wed the Harkonnen male heir, producing the Kwisatz Haderach. But Jessica went against the sisterhood, giving her partner Duke Leto the son he wanted, and somehow, this resulted in the fated figure appearing ahead of schedule. Paul took the water of life, a poison from the sandworms that the Reverend Mother is capable of changing, and learned of his destiny, saying:
“There is in each of us an ancient force that takes and an ancient force that gives. A man finds little difficulty facing that place within himself where the taking force dwells, but it’s almost impossible for him to see into the giving force without changing into something other than man. For a woman, the situation is reversed.”
According to Paul, he is the fulcrum between those two points, able to give without taking and take without giving. That is what makes him the Kwisatz Here’s the thing: The world of Dune is bound by an essentialist gender binary that doesn’t do the story many favors, despite its careful and often inspired worldbuilding. Aside from the fact that gender isn’t a binary, the insistence upon it isn’t a clever story juxtaposition that makes for great themes and plot. It’s an antiquated perspective that reads as out of place, especially in such a far-flung future. This is especially true when you couch maleness as a “taking” force and femaleness as a “giving” force. Men and women are not naturally those things because people overall are not that easily categorized—they are expected to be those things by society. Stating it as some form of spiritual truth, as Dune does, is an awkward declaration that only gets more awkward as time passes.
In addition, Dune is a story that spends much of its narrative currency on battles between binaries. They crop up everywhere in the book: the tension between the Bene Gesserit and the Mentats; the age-old feud between Houses Harkonnen and Atreides; the conditioning of Arrakis’ fremen forces against the conditioning of the Emperor’s sardaukar; the struggle between the ruling houses and the spacing guild. While there are countless groups vying for power, and the political complexities of that do not go unnoticed, Dune still dwells on that ‘A vs B’ dynamic in all the places where it really counts. Without these binary antagonisms, the tale wouldn’t function.
For a story so taken with binaries, there is something arresting about Paul balancing male and female aspects as an implicit factor to being the Kwisatz Haderach. The real confusion lies in the idea that the Kwisatz Haderach always had to be male, as though counterbalancing generations of Bene Gesserit sisters; if the figure is meant to be a fulcrum between those two specific genders, then their own gender should be insignificant. More importantly, if that is the nature of being the Kwisatz Haderach, then coming into that power should ultimately change one’s perception and person entirely. If you’re going to be the balancing point between dual genders, then why would you be solely either of those genders? Paul literally says that being able to do what he does changes him into “something other than man.” It doesn’t make him a woman, clearly, so what’s the alternative here?
It would have been a sharper assertion for Paul to have awoken into a different gender entirely, perhaps genderfluidity or even a lack of gender altogether. This wouldn’t have altered his key actions within the narrative, but it would have added another dimension to his journey. A non-binary protagonist for a story that obsesses over binary thinking would have been a stunning wrench to throw into the works. In many ways, it would have made more thematic sense than what Dune currently offers its readers.
While the upcoming film is unlikely to go that route, it’s tantalizing to think of the story that might have been, of all the possibilities contained therein. A story set in the future that accounted for the complexities of gender identity and how it might pertain to an awakening of consciousness and purpose. Even if Paul was the first person in their time period to consider non-binary gender, that would be a powerful statement that would shape their reality for centuries to come. Perhaps others would embrace non-binary identities to honor Muad’Dib, or it would become a sacred way of being, looked upon with religious fervor due to Paul’s importance. And there are further questions as to how that would have affected the sequels as well—would Leto II also have gone that route? He turns into a sandworm, you can’t tell me they’ve got clear and separated binary genders. They’re worms. In the sand. Try again.
In a story that turns on binaries, particularly as they pertain to gender, it would have changed the whole scheme to consider Paul as a non-binary protagonist. Moreover, it would have been fascinating to see how his perspective changed as a result of being that fulcrum, not just as it related to time, but as it related to people. While the story is quick to zero in on what Paul sees in the flow of time, his “terrible purpose” in putting humanity on the Golden Path, there is no consideration for how this shift in state might effect how he sees other humans. It’s a missed opportunity to really explore what absolute power would look like in a being who can project himself into the experiences of men and women equally. Would he understand his mother better than before? His sister?
It’s not the story that we have, but there will always be a part of my mind preoccupied with these possibilities. Because it’s fun, and because it’s intriguing, and because I will always wonder about what the world would look like if more people didn’t take the concept of binaries for granted.

Emmet Asher-Perrin will be stuck on this point for forever. You can bug them on Twitter, and read more of their work here and elsewhere.
 
His kids were born "pre awoken". They had all the experiences and powers of their father right out of the womb. They were adults in children's bodies. They were able to expertly manipulate everyone around them.



I think he was a Zen master. So that would be Japanese rather than middle East.

And the Dune series was about the rise and fall of cultures. A short ten years after the start of the Jihad, the Freman are living in suburbs, taking pills to prevent water loss and losing the old ways.

Then Leto II comes along and grinds everything away anyway.

Sounds like the weeb argument that the "10 year old loli is actually a 400 year old vampire and it is totally legal "to me. Poor avatar of mine.
 
I haven't read the books since about 1990, so I might be misremembering something here.

One thing about the Golden Path that I think a lot of people took too literally was Leto seeing into the future and seeing "the enemy from outside" or whatever that made him see the need for the Golden Path and the Scattering.

It was all about ensuring the human being never stagnated, so he forced a period of stagnation on people so horrible that it was indelibly written in their genetic memories. His death precipitated a reflexive breaking out -- the scattering -- but then as humanity coalesced again, the people returning had in them this belief that there was an outside enemy they needed to run from and gather back in the old empire, in a way, rebuilding a Jungian Shadow in people since civilization had co-opted or made it predictable. I think a lot of readers took that outside enemy too literally, and what they were running from, "The Return", was actually what they ran from in the first place: Leto's stagnation. They just didn't know it, since it was just locked into the genetic memories of needing to flee.

So maybe the troons are right about the Atreides being troons, and therefore a horror too appalling to contemplate, one which to avoid by going to unreachably distant places in the universe.

Troons are the flip side to the coin of the Bene Tleilax too. The Bene Tleilax were disturbing to people with their adult minds in children's bodies. With troons, it's the other way around.
 
I always assumed Duncan Idaho was semi-gay for Paul in the same way Sam was semi-gay for Mr. Frodo, but I might have misread that relationship because the convoluted plot centers around politics and revenge/worrying about revenge, not love.
 
Even the people in the comments of the article are saying Paul shouldn’t be non-binary.

They're just as clueless. Both Paul and Leto II are Kwitzach Haderach.

It's not a prophecy, that would be Missionaria Protectiva. That was made up myth. To be fair, I got this mixed up too, at one point...

The KH is a MAN who can access the memories of the male line, which the BG are cut off from. Both Paul and Leto Ii can do this...

The Kwitzach Haderach is a genetic experiment..
 
I thought Dune already had sexual deviants in it

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I always assumed Duncan Idaho was semi-gay for Paul in the same way Sam was semi-gay for Mr. Frodo, but I might have misread that relationship because the convoluted plot centers around politics and revenge/worrying about revenge, not love.

I assume you gave up before the Honored Matres and their literal magic vaginas entered to have magic sex with Idaho’s ghola, but his dick was so magical it broke Murbella.
 
I assume you gave up before the Honored Matres and their literal magic vaginas entered to have magic sex with Idaho’s ghola, but his dick was so magical it broke Murbella.
No, I'm aware of how much puss Duncan slayed between his original and the clones, but his heart was always focused on Paul.
 
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They're just as clueless. Both Paul and Leto II are Kwitzach Haderach.

It's not a prophecy, that would be Missionaria Protectiva. That was made up myth. To be fair, I got this mixed up too, at one point...

The KH is a MAN who can access the memories of the male line, which the BG are cut off from. Both Paul and Leto Ii can do this...

The Kwitzach Haderach is a genetic experiment..

They're not even the only Kwitzach Haderachs. There's a throwaway line in one of the later Dune books (maybe Chapterhouse, maybe Heretics) about the Tleilaxu breeding one themselves just to see what would happen.
 
They're not even the only Kwitzach Haderachs. There's a throwaway line in one of the later Dune books (maybe Chapterhouse, maybe Heretics) about the Tleilaxu breeding one themselves just to see what would happen.
I think they drove one of them insane in an experiment to show even a "God" could be broken, I think it was in Dune Messiah
 
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