stefano wrote:[quote:"Joe Hillshoist"]Couldn't comment on Semenya's alleged masculinity (tho her names a bit of a trigger)
Not necessarily, a lot black South African parents give their kids a more or less random English name as a second name, which is often the name they end up getting called at school. I work daily with a man in Joburg called Precious. The quote by the manager seems a lot more dodgy: “We entered Caster as a woman and we want to keep it that way”. Why not just say "Caster is a woman"?
compared2what? wrote:gender roles, as represented by behaviors traditionally associated with chomosomal gender, aren't entirely cultural constructs, either. There's a wide and potentially infinite range of variety. And it's greatly influenced by environmental factors. But on average, there are some pretty enduring and consistent biological components as well.
I absolutely agree, which is why I was asking Penguin about what he'd posted, about 'gender assigned at birth'. I think the biological foundations of gender roles allow a certain amount of variation, but that boys are born with certain impulses and girls with certain others. I think this 'blank slate' way of looking at things is not only silly but can be harmful, as in the case of the hundreds of children who've been 'gender-reassigned' and for whom it may not have worked out.
Of course some children are born with or acquire very different impulses, and it's good that in a lot of places they are now free to live their lives as they wish.[/quote]
I'm relieved to hear it. Research subsequent to the story to which I linked would convince just about anyone of that truth. Which, seriously, should be easily perceptible without research. I mean, come on.
But I think you may have misconstrued the use of the term "gender assignment" in the text Penguin quoted from. It almost certainly doesn't imply random gender assignment. "Intersex" implies that they're talking about infants born with some combination of genetically male and genetically female genital tissues that might look much more like a boy's junk than a girl's junk (or vice versa), but which isn't necessarily a good enough indicator of neurobiological gender to know which "assignment" should be made in any definitive -- ie, surgically irreversible -- way. It used to be up to the doctor (and probably still is, sometimes) to chop 'em up to approximate boy- or girlness at some point in the first 24 months or so, with instructions to the parents to raise the child accordingly, while adhering to a strict policy of secrecy wrt ambiguous birth status.
That resulted in a lot of intensely miserable and confused children who knew perfectly well whether they were boys or girls (or in-between/both) even in the face of 100 per cent contradictory physical and social evidence. Nowadays, advances in what's surgically possible enable them to postpone drastic surgeries until the child can get some say on the matter.
Obviously, for immediate and practical purposes, you know, you've got to name and provisionally assign a gender to your baby in babyhood. But the "gender assignment" in that document probably means "determination of one or the other traditional gender made somewhat later on for social purposes in conjunction with the preference/orientation expressed by the children, even though strictly speaking, they may be more truly hermaphroditic than they are either male or female."
Read the story! You'll like it!
Although it's very, very sad. And even sadder than when it was published, as the subject killed himself several years later. The villain of the piece is a guy called Dr. John Money. Whose work was for decades, and in some regards still is, considered definitive in the area of pediatric psychosexuality. Alarmingly.