SEVENTH AUSTRALIAN
Family futures: issues in research and policy:
"IS GENDER A SOCIAL CONSTRUCT OR A BIOLOGICAL IMPERATIVE?"
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The nature vs. nurture debate on whether it is biology or environment that causes human beings to choose certain roles and lifestyles is a perennial controversy in socio-biology, but since the seventies the debate has been extended to whether nurture, i.e. culture, can override biology and be a determinant of sex itself. This paper critiques the "gender agenda" of contemporary feminism and the politicization of the word "gender" as a substitute for the sex of a person. This issue reached high drama at
the June 2000 Beijing + 5 United Nations Women's Conference in New York
when the development agencies of the Scandinavian countries and Germany
threatened to withhold development money from Nicaragua unless the
Nicaraguan Government sacked the head of their delegation from his Cabinet
post as Minister for the Family. His offence, on-going from the 1999 Cairo
+ 5 Conference on Population and Development, was to refuse to accept the
European Union definition of "gender" as an arbitrary social construct
which could include several "genders"; he insisted that "gender" be
defined in its common meaning of two sexes, male and female. The hapless
Max Padilla was duly recalled -
Liberal feminists of the 60s or what Christina Hoff Sommers author of "Who Stole Feminism" (2) refers to as "equity feminists", believed that women should have as much freedom and opportunity as men and that discriminatory laws should be eliminated. However, within a decade, liberal feminism was overtaken by the far more radical "gender feminism", which, building on Marxist ideology, requires the elimination not only of economic classes but of sex classes, i.e. the division of humans into male and female. Hence the substitution of the word
"gender" for sex . "Gender" is primarily a grammatical term, which may be
determined by a distinguishing characteristic, i.e. sex, but gender can
also be arbitrary like the gender of some nouns in Spanish and French -
table in Spanish is feminine ( "This classification functions only if we take into account the internal sexual organs and the "secondary" sexual characteristics as a unity, but if we imagine the multiple possibilities that could result from a combination of the five physiological areas that we already mentioned, we see that our dichotomy man/woman, more than a biological reality, is a symbolic and cultural reality" (3) According to Sra Llama man/woman, masculine/feminine are merely cultural constructions, and thinking that heterosexuality is the "natural" sexuality is only another "example of a 'biological' social construction". As a further development of Sra Llama's theme, at the UN Women's World Conference in Beijing in 1995 feminists claimed that the sexuality of multiple genders found expression as heterosexual, homosexual, bisexual, asexual, hermaphrodite, transvestite and transgendered, the latter group being further sub-divided into those who were awaiting surgery, those who had surgery, and those who had surgery but now wished to revert back to their original condition. The views of Sra Llama and other gender feminists from New York has dominated the United Nations agencies for the past decade, requiring the UN and member States to "mainstream the gender perspective" in all documents and Plans of Action. According to a booklet published by the UN International Research & Training Institute for the Advancement of Women (INSTRAW): "To adopt a gender perspective is ....to distinguish between what is natural and biological and what is socially and culturally constructed, and in the process to re-negotiate the boundaries between the natural – and hence relatively inflexible - and the social - and hence relatively transformable". (4) An article, part of the resource material from a course on "Re-Imagining Gender" at Hunter College, New York, by Lucy Gilbert and Paula Webster states: “Each infant is assigned to one or the other category on the basis of the shape and size of its genitals. Once this assignment is made, we become what culture believes each of us to be - feminine or masculine. Although many people think that men and women are the natural expression of a genetic blueprint, gender is a product of human thought and culture, a social construction that creates the 'true nature' of all individuals". (5) In a chapter from a book by Kate Bornestein (6), a man who underwent a "sex change" argues that the way to liberate women is to deconstruct gender: "Women couldn't be oppressed if there was no such thing as 'women'......doing away with gender is key to the doing away with patriarchy........Gender fluidity is the ability to freely and knowingly become one or many of a limitless number of genders, for any length of time, at any rate of change. Gender fluidity recognizes no borders or rules of gender" (Bornestein p. 52). The congenital malformations referred to by Sra Llama are comparatively rare and it is the contention of this paper that they do not prove there are more than two sexes and do not prove that heterosexuality is not natural any more than the fact that some babies are born blind proves that it isn't natural for human beings to see. Biological sex is not determined by external organs but by genetic structure. Every cell of the human body is clearly marked male or female, and the human brain, which is the primary sex organ, is masculinized or feminized in the fetal stage of development by the presence or absence of testosterone. Furthermore, human beings do not exist on a continuum between male and female. Those rare cases of infants born with anomalous genitals deserve sympathy and treatment on the basis of their chromosomal sex, the presence of a "Y" chromosome indicating a male, and its absence denoting a female. The occurrence of some rare abnormalities do not require the re-assignment of the entire human race. Women often have difficulty deciding what to wear, and it seems unduly burdensome to also compel them to decide what "gender on the continuum" they belong to for the day. In
A survey of the literature on sex differences - many of which are acknowledged by feminist scholars - yielded a rich harvest. Sex differences are apparent not only before birth but even before conception. Perhaps I was the only member of the Committee who had looked into a microscope and had seen the difference in appearance and behaviour between androsperm, the boy-producing sperm, and gynosperm, the girl-producing sperm. Obviously social conditioning and "sexism" were not the cause. Time here does not permit a full review of sex differences, but I did summarize them in a resource paper in 1981. (8) I continued to be troubled by the belief of the other Committee members - and of feminists in general - that human nature is completely malleable, and that babies arrive as lumps of soft playdough on which society, i.e. parents and teachers, can imprint whatever they choose. Having four daughters and four sons myself, I knew from experience that girls and boys are different and that one can give them "counter-sexist" toys, but they will not necessarily play in the politically correct manner. A family crisis once occurred when my son took the head off a bride doll which had been treasured by his older sister - he wanted to know how it was made. Although not recorded in the
Majority Report, a recurring name in our discussions at the Victorian
Committee on Equal Opportunity in Schools was that of
Bruce and Brian Reimer, normal
identical twin boys, were born in The parents did not realise that Money's previous infant cases of sex re-assignment had been hermaphrodites and that the procedure he recommended - castration and the construction of external female genitalia, followed by hormone treatment when the child was eleven - was experimental. It had never been attempted on a child born with normal genitals and nervous system. Fate had delivered into Money's hands the oppportunity for the perfect experiment, complete with the perfect "control", the identical twin, essential if results are to be validated. The Reimer's pediatrician in
The baby was renamed "Brenda". In making their drastic decision, Ron and Janet Reimer were no doubt influenced by the prospect of the teasing and humiliation their child would endure as a boy at school and elsewhere. As a baby they could not even leave him with a baby-sitter because any nappy change would reveal his terrible injury. At that time plastic surgery was in its infancy, and it was considered much easier to construct a vagina than restore a penis, so at the Gender Identity Clinic hermaphrodite infants were often assigned as female and routinely castrated. However, Bruce Reimer was not hermaphrodite. His parents made every effort to follow Dr. Money's instructions scrupulously and raise Brenda as a girl. For the twins' second birthday, Janet made her a dress from the white satin of her own wedding gown. "It was pretty and lacy", Janet recalls. "She was ripping at it, trying to tear it off. I remember thinking Oh my God, she knows she's a boy and she doesn't want to be a girl. But then I thought, well maybe I can teach her to want to be a girl. Maybe I can train her so that she wants to be a girl". (9) The experiment was a failure from the outset - Brenda showed no signs of femininity and every sign of masculine behaviour, including rough and tumble and fighting games, and standing up in the toilet to urinate. She failed to bond with her female school mates, and despite several changes of school, and referral to counselling and psychiatrists, had disciplinary and academic problems; she just did not fit in. She was kept back in first grade; her identical twin was promoted. At the time of Brenda's castration,
Dr. Money had stipulated that the parents with both Brenda and her twin,
Brian, pay follow-up yearly visits to his Psychohormonal Research Unit at
John Hopkins in Besides the yearly visits, the
Reimer parents also corresponded with Dr. Money about the many
difficulties they were having with Brenda, but were reassured by Money and
his colleagues that Brenda was just going through a "tomboyish" phase.
Despite all the indications that the experiment was a massive failure and
that Brenda was having major psychological and behavioural problems, in
December 1972, four months after Brenda began her second attempt at first
grade, Dr. Money unveiled his famous twins' case. In a two-day series
devoted to "Sex Role Learning in Childhood and Adolescence" at the annual
meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science in
Culling data from the hermaphrodites who had passed through Money's Psychohormonal Research Unit, the book dealt with genetics, embryology, neuroendocrinology, neurosurgery , social, medical and clinical psychology and social anthropology. It is a complicated work, but the theme was clear: the primary factors driving human psychosexual differentiation are learning and environment, not biology. Money wrote that as planned experiments on humans are ethically unthinkable, one can only take advantage of unplanned opportunities such as when a normal boy baby loses his penis in a circumcision accident, and how he had taken advantage of just such an opportunity. From his description the case was a great success - he contrasted Brian's interest in "cars, gas pumps and tools" with Brenda's avid interest in "dolls, a doll house and a doll carriage", Brenda's cleanliness was characterised as different from Brian's disregard for such matters, Brenda was interested in kitchen work, Brian disdained it. Money did describe Brenda as always the "dominant twin", though by age three he reported her dominance over Brian had become "that of a mother hen". The twins seemed to embody an almost miraculous division of taste, temperament and behaviour along gender lines, and seemed the ultimate proof that boys and girls are made not born. (9) The importance of the twins' case cannot be underestimated. It was seized on by the feminist movement which had been arguing for years against a biological basis for sex differences (except when they were also arguing that research on sex differences should be completely stopped because it might be misused - presumably by the fundamentalist religious right).(l0) Money's papers from the 1950s on the psychosexual neutrality of newborns had already been used as one of the main foundations of modern feminism. Kate Millet in her 1970 definitive feminist tome, "Sexual Politics", had quoted Money's papers as scientific proof that the differences between men and women reflect not biological imperatives but societal expectations and prejudices. The twins' case offered apparently irrefutable proof to support that view. Over the next few years Money
continued to present Brenda's case as a success - even when on her yearly
visits to him she was frowning, sullen and answered his questions in
monosyllables, and was so reluctant to see him that her parents had to
bribe her with promises of trips to On her visit in 1978 to Dr. John
Money when he arranged for a transexual to talk to her, Brenda became so
terrified she ran away from the Clinic, and on being re-united with her
parents at their hotel she told them that if they ever again forced her to
see Dr. Money she would kill herself. Her parents still hoped that her
metamorphosis as "Brenda" would occur, but in May of 1980 when Brenda
insisted to her Although Money's views on
psychosexual neutrality or the malleability of gender identity was the
established wisdom of the scientific community and particularly of the
feminist movement, there was at least one researcher who had been
questioning his conclusions. With a pioneering team of endocrinologists at
the The results were published in a 1959 issue of Endocrinology.(11) In a follow-up paper entitled "A Critical Evaluation of the Ontogeny of Human Sexual Behaviour" Diamond rejected outright the John Hopkins team's theory. Reporting on the guinea pig findings, Diamond stated that prebirth factors set limits on how far culture, learning and environment can direct gender in humans. Citing evidence from biology, psychology, psychiatry, anthropology and endocrinology, he argued that gender identity is hardwired into the brain virtually from conception. Later confirmation of the guinea pig experiments was to come from effects observed in girls who had been exposed to testosterone in utero - either accidentally or as medication given to their mothers. Diamond's 1959 paper was a direct challenge to the scientific authority of John Money, who had become one of the gurus of the feminist movement. A long and acrimonious academic debate spanning decades ensued. It may explain why when fate delivered to Money the opportunity for the "perfect" experiment on the identical twins, he seized it so eagerly and why he was so reluctant to acknowledge the signs of failure. The media inevitably became interested in the famous twins' case which stood as the most compelling evidence to prove the primacy of rearing over biology in the formation of gender identity. However, when a BBC reporter began investigating , he heard rumours that the case was not all it seemed to be. A BBC documentary was produced, entitled "The First Question" in reference to the first query by parents at birth, "Is it a boy or a girl?". There were other media articles as well as the on-going debate in the scientific literature. Psychiatrist Keith Sigmundson's "John/Joan" article on Brenda's case was published in the Archives of Pediatrics and Adolescent Medicine in March 997 and journalist John Colapinto's article in Rolling Stone in December 1997 has now been expanded to a 279 page book, "As Nature Made Him". (9) The real hero of this story is not Milton Diamond or John Colapinto - it is Brenda, or as she was renamed "David", who having learned the truth, wasted no time in reclaiming his sexual identity. By his fifteenth birthday he was living socially as a male. He began receiving injections of testosterone, and in 1980 underwent an intensely painful double mastectomy. In 1981 he had surgery to construct a rudimentary penis from muscle and skin from the inside of his thighs. Before his twenty-second birthday he had a second more successful phalloplasty in a 12-stage operation. In September 1990 David Reimer married Jane Fontane, a single mother of three children. His new name was symbolic of his struggle against the Goliath represented by John Money and the medical establishment, and of his courage in giving permission for his personal identity and medical details to be revealed. Until David Reimer spoke publicly about his ordeal the medical establishment was reluctant to admit the dangers of current practice in treating intersex babies, their reluctance no doubt underpinned by their deference to the feminist movement, which, still stuck in a time warp, believes that one can produce an androgynous society by adopting "counter-sexist" educational practices. Thus in
A dose of reality eventually
pervaded the medical establishment, at least in the
One wonders whether this reality has reached Australian shores. - legislation on "Gender Identity and Sexual Orientation" is pending in the Victorian Parliament and surgery on transexuals and the transgendered continues. In the meantime normal boys are being seriously disadvantaged by the feminization of education, a problem which is just beginning to attract the attention of Australian politicians. In the
* * * References:
(1) Austin Ruse: C-Fam;
(2) Christina Hoff Sommers: "Who Stole Feminism"; Simon & (3) Dale O"Leary: "The Gender
Agenda: Redefining Equality"; ital Issue Press,
(4) International Research & Training Institute for the Advancement of Women (United Nations): "Gender Concepts in Development Planning: Basic Approach" (INSTRAW 1995, p. 11). (5) Lucy Gilbert and Paula Webster: "The Dangers of Femininity: Gender Differences: Sociology or Biology", p. 40 {photocopied materials supplied for course}. (6) Kate Bornestein: "Gender
Outlaw: On Men, Women and the Rest of Us";
(7) (8) (9) John Colapinto: "As Nature Made
Him: The Boy who was Raised as a Girl"; Harper Collins,
(10) "Theoretical Perspectives on
Sexual Differences", edited by Deborah L. Rhode, 315pp, (Outgrowth of a
conference sponsored by Stanford's Construction of Gender", edited by
Rachel T. Hare-Martin and Jeanne Marecek, 215 pp, (Subjects Sex Roles,
Women, Psychology) Bib Record ID 00 66 40550 Dewey Number 305 3H 275M),
both ublished by (11) Milton Diamond: "Prenatal Androgen and Sex Behaviour"; Endocrinology, July-Dec, 1959. Vol. 65, pp. 369 - 382. (l2) "Quality Improvement and
Accreditation System Handbook: Putting Children First". Published October
1993 by the National Childcare Accreditation Council,
(13) William Reiner MD:
"Psychosexual Dysfunction in Males with Genital Anomalies: Late
Adolescence, Tanner Stages 1V TO V1"; Journal of the
(14) Paul McHugh: "Psychiatric Misadventures"; The American Scholar, 1992, Vols 60 - 61, pp. 497-510. (15) Jon Meyer & Donna Reter: "Sex Re-Assignment"; Archives of General Psychiatry, 1979. Vol. 36, pp. 1010-1015. (16) William Reiner MD: "Sex
Reassignment on a Teenage Girl"; Journal of the
(17) Personal communication from
Dr. Joel Brind, Professor of Endocrinology,
National & Overseas Co-ordinator Endeavour Forum Inc., Toorak, Vic. 3142, Ph: 61 - 3 -9822 5218 Fax: 61 - 3 - 9822 3069 email: babette@endeavourforum.org.au
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