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06/12/18: "An Unnamed Blank That Craved a Name": A Genealogy of Intersex as Gender

Updated: Jan 15, 2019



For the week, 06/12/18, we'll be reading/discussing David A. Rubin's (2012): ""An Unnamed Blank That Craved a Name”: A Genealogy of Intersex as Gender", which is a highly compelling example of what a queer feminist STS approach can achieve. This paper touches on our discussion last time about the need (political or otherwise) to consider both (i) the implications of gender(ed) binaries and (ii) experiences, identities and bodies that lie outside of these binaries.


Details: Thursday 6th December, 5pm-6pm, Alice Farrands Reading Room, 22 Gordon Square, WC1H 0AW


Abstract: This article traces a genealogy of intersexuality’s underrecognized but historically pivotal role in the development of gender as a concept in twentieth-century American biomedicine, feminism, and their globalizing circuits. Using a queer feminist science studies approach, I argue that intersex has been and remains central to the history of gender as a classificatory schema, object of knowledge, technology of subject formation, and paradigm of sociality in late modernity. This genealogy pushes beyond current scholarship on intersexuality to suggest that, while dominant understandings of sex and gender have overdetermined the meaning of intersex, historically speaking, the concept of intersex paradoxically preceded and inaugurated what we would today call the sex/gender distinction. Through a close reading of psychoendocrinologist John Money’s biomedical research, I show that intersex was integral to the historical emergence of the category gender as distinct from sex in the mid-twentieth-century English-speaking world. I argue that Money used the concept of gender to cover over and displace the biological instability of the body he discovered through his research on intersex and that Money’s conception of gender produced new technologies of psychosomatic normalization. Situating Money’s work within the history of feminist theorizing about sex and gender, I conclude by reflecting on what the intertwined histories of intersex, biomedicine, and feminism might mean for the field of women’s and gender studies.


Link: https://www.jstor.org/stable/pdf/10.1086/664471

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