10.31.2006

Gender identity

The great discussion we've had today about transgender issues reminds me of a book I read several years ago: As Nature Made Him: The Boy Who Was Raised as a Girl by John Colapinto. Fascinating and disturbing, this story has definitely influenced my views on the nature of gender identity and human sexuality. Here's the Publisher's Weekly summary (which says it better than I could say myself):

Forget sugar, spice, snails and puppy dog tails: discussions of how little boys and little girls are made have become quite complicated over the past three decades, as scientists, feminists and social theorists debate the relative impact of "nature" and "nurture" on gender and sexual identity. Focusing on the real-life story behind sexologist Dr. John Money's famous sexual reassignment case of 1965, Colapinto, an award-winning journalist, has penned a gripping medical melodrama.

After Bruce Thiessen, one of two identical male twins, lost his penis during a botched circumcision, he underwent surgery that made him anatomically female, later received estrogen injections and was raised as a girl under Money's supervision at the Psychohormonal Research Unit at Johns Hopkins. All of Money's reports of the case--which quickly appeared in textbooks as a prime example of environment trumping biology--portrayed Bruce (now Brenda) as a well-adjusted girl, although the reality was quite different. Angry, sullen and having always insisted that "she" was a boy, Brenda finally decided at age 15--after "she" finally learned of the surgery-to revert to her original sex and take the name David.

Drawing on extensive interviews with the Thiessen family, "Brenda"'s therapists and friends, Colapinto has written a wrenching personal narrative and a scathing indictment of Money's methods and theories, including instances of what Colapinto and David Thiessen see as extraordinarily invasive behavior and sexual abuse in his xaminations of "Brenda" and her twin brother. Although Colapinto runs into trouble when he tries to generalize about nature vs. nurture from this single case, his book is illuminating, frightening and moving.

2 Comments:

At 10/31/2006 4:31 PM, Blogger Hottentot Not said...

There is also an awesome documentary about a group of transgendered friends and lovers who live in the deep south. It is interesting to see the ways in which all types of oppression play into their experiences as transgendered people (race, sex, SES, health...). The main character in the film has cancer and his described experiences with hospitals and clinicians really sets a tone for how we as future physicians can ensure that each encounter we have is patient-centered and open minded. I highly recommened renting and seeing it--it's called Southern Comfort and you can definitely get it at the Marriott library on lower campus in the mulitmedia center, the city library, and the larger video rental stores.
Let me know and I'll watch it again with you too! :)

 
At 10/31/2006 4:35 PM, Blogger Hottentot Not said...

Oh yes I almost forgot to mention that the book that Brad also has a video counterpart. David appears in an interview special with Dateline NBC to tell his story. Also the doctor who botched the circumcision and "chose" the sex of the baby is also interviewed.
I'm sure you can find it on youtube. I will research that because it is super interesting!

 

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