Judith Butler’s Performative Acts and Gender Constitution advances a decisive critique of gender as an innate or expressive essence, arguing instead that gender is a performative accomplishment produced through repeated, socially legible acts. Drawing upon phenomenology, Beauvoir’s dictum that one “becomes” a woman, and theatrical models of enactment, Butler relocates gender from the interior self to the temporally sedimented surface of the body: gestures, movements, comportments, clothing, speech, and everyday ritual congeal into the illusion of a stable identity. This does not mean gender is freely chosen; rather, it is enacted under social sanction and taboo, where failure to perform recognisable masculinity or femininity may provoke ridicule, exclusion, or violence. A telling case synthesis appears in Butler’s contrast between theatrical cross-dressing and its public analogue: a transvestite on stage may be applauded as performance, whereas the same embodiment on a bus can unsettle the presumed boundary between appearance and reality, revealing that all gender coherence depends upon convention. Consequently, Butler’s argument displaces feminist theories that treat “women” as a transparent universal category, insisting that political critique must examine how such categories are themselves constituted. The essay’s enduring force lies in its conclusion that gender’s repetitions are never perfectly sealed; precisely because identity is produced through reiterated acts, subversive repetition can expose its contingency and expand the cultural field of bodily possibility.