From #MeToo to Milo Yiannopoulos, this has been the year of gender trouble. Here are our top ten stories on gender, sexuality, and justice in 2017.

Will Feminism's Past Mistakes Haunt #MeToo
by Judith Levine

#MeToo must go beyond the demand for punishment. Vengeance may satisfy us now, but it does not create a just culture.

He Said, He Said: The Feminization of James Comey
by Bonnie Honig

Conservatives routinely deny that gender is fluid. Yet they feminized James Comey so rapidly, you would think he was J. Edgar Hoover.

Ash Wednesday
Memoir by Samuel R. Delany

“I’m known as a sex radical, but the fact is I am nowhere near as radical as many.”

#Milosexual and the Aesthetics of Fascism
by Daniel Penny

Milo Yiannopoulos was the paradoxical posterboy for the alt-right's fascist erotic. Until he wasn't.

#ThemToo
by Judith Levine

To fight sexual harassment in the workplace, we must learn from the history of women in the labor movement.

Two Paths for the Personal Essay
by Merve Emre

What we see in women's writing today is not the shattering of language but the shattering of a pact between reader and writer.

Don't Press Charges and I Won't Sue
Short fiction by Charlie Jane Anders

“The gender change looked more like landscaping: building embankments out of raw dirt, heaving big rocks to change the course of rivers, and uprooting plants stem by stem.”

Make Margaret Atwood Fiction Again
Junot Díaz in conversation with Margaret Atwood

In 1985 The Handmaid's Tale was only a remote possibility. In the United States today, it has approached reality.

Sky Veins of Potosí
Short fiction by Jordy Rosenberg

“You used terms such as revolutionaries. Comrades. And, most illegally of all: lovers. Unmarried people who fuck each other without the goal of childrening. Well, I was sunk.”

In the Name of Victims
by Kristin Bumiller

The effect of the struggle over Title IX will be a deeper entrenchment of the tendency to treat sex as a matter of risk management.