Bodies in doubt : an American history of intersex

著者

    • Reis, Elizabeth

書誌事項

Bodies in doubt : an American history of intersex

Elizabeth Reis

Johns Hopkins University Press, 2009

  • : hbk

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注記

Includes bibliographical references (p. 163-208) and index

内容説明・目次

内容説明

What does it mean to be human? To be human is, in part, to be physically sexed and culturally gendered. Yet not all bodies are clearly male or female. Bodies in Doubt traces the changing definitions, perceptions, and medical management of intersex (atypical sex development) in America from the colonial period to the present day. From the beginning, intersex bodies have been marked as "other," as monstrous, sinister, threatening, inferior, and unfortunate. Some nineteenth-century doctors viewed their intersex patients with disrespect and suspicion. Later, doctors showed more empathy for their patients' plights and tried to make correct decisions regarding their care. Yet definitions of "correct" in matters of intersex were entangled with shifting ideas and tensions about what was natural and normal, indeed about what constituted personhood or humanity. Reis has examined hundreds of cases of "hermaphroditism" and intersex found in medical and popular literature and argues that medical practice cannot be understood outside of the broader cultural context in which it is embedded. As the history of responses to intersex bodies has shown, doctors are influenced by social concerns about marriage and heterosexuality. Bodies in Doubt considers how Americans have interpreted and handled ambiguous bodies, how the criteria and the authority for judging bodies changed, how both the binary gender ideal and the anxiety over uncertainty persisted, and how the process for defining the very norms of sex and gender evolved. Bodies in Doubt breaks new ground in examining the historical roots of modern attitudes about intersex in the United States and will interest scholars and researchers in disability studies, social history, gender studies, and the history of medicine.

目次

Acknowledgments Introduction A Note about the Illustrations 1. Hermaphrodites, Monstrous Births, and Same-Sex Intimacy in Early America 2. From Monsters to Deceivers in the Early Nineteenth Century 3. The Conflation of Hermaphrodites and Sexual Perverts at the Turn of the Century 4. Cutting the Gordian Knot: Gonads, Marriage, and Surgery in the 1920s and 1930s 5. Psychology, John Money, and the Gender of Rearing in the 1940s, 1950s, and 1960s Epilogue: Divergence or Disorder? The Politics of Naming Intersex Notes Index

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