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Intersexuals, formerly called hermaphrodites, have been
around as long as humans have, though until recently few felt
comfortable enough to "come out" about their conditions.
| Two Sexes Are Not
Enough by Anne
Fausto-Sterling
In 1843 Levi Suydam, a 23-year-old resident
of Salisbury, Connecticut, asked the town's board of selectmen to allow
him to vote as a Whig in a hotly contested local election. The request
raised a flurry of objections from the opposition party, for a reason that
must be rare in the annals of American democracy: It was said that Suydam
was "more female than male," and thus (since only men had the right to
vote) should not be allowed to cast a ballot. The selectmen brought in a
physician, one Dr. William Barry, to examine Suydam and settle the matter.
Presumably, upon encountering a phallus and testicles, the good doctor
declared the prospective voter male. With Suydam safely in their column,
the Whigs won the election by a majority of one.
A few days later,
however, Barry discovered that Suydam menstruated regularly and had a
vaginal opening. Suydam had the narrow shoulders and broad hips
characteristic of a female build, but occasionally "he" felt physical
attractions to the "opposite" sex (by which "he" meant women).
Furthermore, "his feminine propensities, such as fondness for gay colors,
for pieces of calico, comparing and placing them together, and an aversion
for bodily labor and an inability to perform the same, were remarked by
many." (Note that this 19th-century doctor did not distinguish
between "sex" and "gender." Thus he considered a fondness for piecing
together swatches of calico just as telling as anatomy and physiology.) No
one has yet discovered whether Suydam lost the right to vote. Whatever the
outcome, the story conveys both the political weight our culture places on
ascertaining a person's correct "sex" and the deep confusion that arises
when it can't be easily determined.
European and American culture
is deeply devoted to the idea that there are only two sexes. Even our
language refuses other possibilities; thus to write about Levi Suydam I
have had to invent conventions -- s/he and h/er to denote individuals who
are clearly neither/both male and female or who are, perhaps, both at
once. Nor is the linguistic convenience an idle fancy. Whether one falls
into the category of man or woman matters in concrete ways. For Suydam --
and still today for women in some parts of the world -- it meant the right
to vote. It might mean being subject to the military draft and to various
laws concerning the family and marriage. In many parts of the United
States, for example, two individuals legally registered as men cannot have
sexual relations without breaking antisodomy laws.
Male and female form the extremes of a biological continuum
that features many types of intersex conditions.
|
| But if the state and legal
system has an interest in maintaining only two sexes, our collective
biological bodies do not. While male and female stand on the extreme ends
of a biological continuum, there are many other bodies, bodies such as
Suydam's, that evidently mix together anatomical components conventionally
attributed to both males and females. The implications of my argument for
a sexual continuum are profound. If nature really offers us more than two
sexes, then it follows that our current notions of masculinity and
femininity are cultural conceits. Reconceptualizing the category of "sex"
challenges cherished aspects of European and American social
organization.
Indeed, we have begun to insist on the male-female
dichotomy at increasingly early stages, making the two-sex system more
deeply a part of how we imagine human life and giving it the appearance of
being both inborn and natural. Nowadays, months before the child leaves
the comfort of the womb, amniocentesis and ultrasound identify a fetus's
sex. Parents can decorate the baby's room in gender-appropriate style,
sports wallpaper -- in blue -- for the little boy, flowered designs -- in
pink -- for the little girl. Researchers have nearly completed development
of technology that can choose the sex of a child at the moment of
fertilization. Moreover, modern surgical techniques help maintain the
two-sex system. Today children who are born "either/or -- neither/both" --
a fairly common phenomenon -- usually disappear from view because doctors
"correct" them right away with surgery. In the past, however, intersexuals
(or hermaphrodites, as they were called until recently), were culturally
acknowledged.
|
Within 24 hours of the birth of an intersex baby, doctors
typically operate to assign the newborn a gender.
| Hermaphroditic heresies
In 1993 I published a modest proposal suggesting that we replace our
two-sex system with a five-sex one. In addition to males and females, I
argued, we should also accept the categories herms (named after "true"
hermaphrodites), merms (named after male "pseudohermaphrodites"), and
ferms (named after female "pseudohermaphrodites"). [Editor's note:
A "true" hermaphrodite bears an ovary and a testis, or a combined gonad
called an ovo-testis. A "pseudohermaphrodite" has either an ovary or a
testis, along with genitals from the "opposite" sex.] I'd intended to be
provocative, but I had also been writing tongue in cheek and so was
surprised by the extent of the controversy the article unleashed.
Right-wing Christians somehow connected my idea of five sexes to the
United Nations-sponsored Fourth World Conference on Women, to be held in
Beijing two years later, apparently seeing some sort of global conspiracy
at work. "It is maddening," says the text of a New York Times
advertisement paid for by the Catholic League for Religious and Civil
Rights, "to listen to discussions of 'five genders' when every sane person
knows there are but two sexes, both of which are rooted in nature."
Sexologist John Money, who features largely in the NOVA
program "Sex: Unknown," was "horrified" at Fausto-Sterling's
proposal that there be five sexes.
|
| [Sexologist] John Money was
also horrified by my article, although for different reasons. In a new
edition of his guide for those who counsel intersexual children and their
families, he wrote: "In the 1970's nurturists ... became ... 'social
constructionists.' They align themselves against biology and medicine ...
They consider all sex differences as artifacts of social construction. In
cases of birth defects of the sex organs, they attack all medical and
surgical interventions as unjustified meddling designed to force babies
into fixed social molds of male and female ... One writer has gone even to
the extreme of proposing that there are five sexes ... (Fausto-Sterling)."
Meanwhile, those battling against the constraints of our
sex/gender system were delighted by the article. The science fiction
writer Melissa Scott wrote a novel entitled Shadow Man, which
includes nine types of sexual preference and several genders, including
fems (people with testes, XY chromosomes, and some aspects of female
genitalia), herms (people with ovaries and testes), and mems (people with
XX chromosomes and some aspects of male genitalia). Others used the idea
of five sexes as a starting point for their own multi-gendered
theories.
|
More and more intersexuals are speaking out about their
experiences, including Max Beck, seen here with his daughter Alder
(see My Life
as an Intersexual).
| Clearly I had struck a nerve. The fact that so
many people could get riled up by my proposal to revamp our sex/gender
system suggested that change (and resistance to it) might be in the
offing. Indeed, a lot has changed since 1993, and I like to think
that my article was one important stimulus. Intersexuals have materialized
before our very eyes, like beings beamed up onto the Starship Enterprise.
They have become political organizers lobbying physicians and politicians
to change treatment practices. More generally, the debate over our
cultural conceptions of gender has escalated, and the boundaries
separating masculine and feminine seem harder than ever to define. Some
find the changes under way deeply disturbing; others find them
liberating.
I, of course, am committed to challenging ideas about
the male/female divide. In chorus with a growing organization of adult
intersexuals, a small group of scholars, and a small but growing cadre of
medical practitioners, I argue that medical management of intersexual
births needs to change. First, let there be no unnecessary infant
surgery (by necessary I mean to save the infant's life or
significantly improve h/er physical well-being). Second, let
physicians assign a provisional sex (male or female) to the infant (based
on existing knowledge of the probability of a particular gender identity
formation -- penis size be damned!). Third, let the medical care
team provide full information and long-term counseling to the parents and
to the child. However well-intentioned, the methods for managing
intersexuality, so entrenched since the 1950s, have done serious harm.
|
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Dr. Anne Fausto-Sterling is a biologist and historian at
Brown University. The passages above were excerpted from her book
Sexing the Body: Gender Politics and the Construction of
Sexuality. ©1999 by Anne Fausto-Sterling. Reprinted by
permission of Basic Books. All rights
reserved. |
Photos:
(1-2) Antique photographs of intersexual circus performers from Freaks,
Geeks and Strange Girls by Randy Johnson, Jim Secreto, and Teddy
Varnell. Honolulu: Hardy Marks Publications, 1995; (3-4, 6) WGBH/NOVA; (5)
Courtesy of Max Beck.
My Life as an
Intersexual | Share Your Story
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