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Diagram of Sex and Gender
BIOLOGICAL SEX
(anatomy, chromosomes, hormones)
male ------------------------------------- intersex --------------------------------- female
GENDER IDENTITY
(psychological sense of self)
man -------------------------------- two spirit/third gender ------------------------ woman
GENDER EXPRESSION
(communication of gender)
masculine ------------------------------ androgynous ----------------------------- feminine
SEXUAL ORIENTATION
(romantic/erotic response)
attracted to women ------------------ bisexual/asexual --------------------- attracted to men
Biological sex,
shown on the top scale, includes external genitalia, internal
reproductive structures, chromosomes, hormone levels, and secondary sex
characteristics such as breasts, facial and body hair, and fat
distribution. These characteristics are objective in that they can be
seen and measured (with appropriate technology). The scale consists not
just of two categories (male and female) but is actually a continuum,
with most people existing somewhere near one end or the other. The space
more in the middle is occupied by intersex people (formerly,
hermaphrodites), who have combinations of characteristics typical of
males and those typical of females, such as both a testis and an ovary,
or XY chromosomes (the usual male pattern) and a vagina, or they may
have features that are not completely male or completely female, such as
an organ that could be thought of as a small penis or a large clitoris,
or an XXY chromosomal pattern.
Gender identity
is how people think of themselves and identify in terms of sex (man,
woman, boy, girl). Gender identity is a psychological quality; unlike
biological sex, it can't be observed or measured (at least by current
means), only reported by the individual. Like biological sex, it
consists of more than two categories, and there's space in the middle
for those who identify as a third gender, both (two-spirit), or neither.
We lack language for this intermediate position because everyone in our
culture is supposed to identify unequivocally with one of the two
extreme categories. In fact, many people feel that they have masculine
and feminine aspects of their psyches, and some people, fearing that
they do, seek to purge themselves of one or the other by acting in
exaggerated sex-stereotyped ways.
Gender expression
is everything we do that communicates our sex/gender to others:
clothing, hair styles, mannerisms, way of speaking, roles we take in
interactions, etc. This communication may be purposeful or accidental.
It could also be called social gender because it relates to interactions
between people. Trappings of one gender or the other may be forced on us
as children or by dress codes at school or work. Gender expression is a
continuum, with feminine at one end and masculine at the other. In
between are gender expressions that are androgynous (neither masculine
nor feminine) and those that combine elements of the two (sometimes
called gender bending). Gender expression can vary for an individual
from day to day or in different situations, but most people can identify
a range on the scale where they feel the most comfortable. Some people
are comfortable with a wider range of gender expression than others.
Sexual orientation
indicates who we are erotically attracted to. The ends of this scale are
labeled "attracted to women" and "attracted to men," rather than
"homosexual" and "heterosexual," to avoid confusion as we discuss the
concepts of sex and gender. In the mid-range is bisexuality; there are
also people who are asexual (attracted to neither men nor women). We
tend to think of most people as falling into one of the two extreme
categories (attracted to women or attracted to men), whether they are
straight or gay, with only a small minority clustering around the
bisexual middle. However, Kinsey's studies showed that most people are
in fact not at one extreme of this continuum or the other, but occupy
some position between.
For each scale, the popular notion that
there are two distinct categories, with everyone falling neatly into one
or the other, is a social construction. The real world (Nature, if you
will) does not observe these boundaries. If we look at what actually
exists, we see that there is middle ground. To be sure, most people fall
near one end of the scale or the other, but very few people are actually
at the extreme ends, and there are people at every point along the
continuum.
Gender identity and sexual orientation are
resistant to change. Although we don't yet have definitive answers to
whether these are the result of biological influences, psychological
ones, or both, we do know that they are established very early in life,
possibly prenatally, and there are no methods that have been proven
effective for changing either of these. Some factors that make up
biological sex can be changed, with more or less difficulty. These
changes are not limited to people who change their sex: many women
undergo breast enlargement, which moves them toward the extreme female
end of the scale, and men have penile enlargements to enhance their
maleness, for example. Gender expression is quite flexible for some
people and more rigid for others. Most people feel strongly about
expressing themselves in a way that's consistent with their inner gender
identity and experience discomfort when they're not allowed to do so.
The four scales are independent. Our
cultural expectation is that men occupy the extreme left ends of all
four scales (male, man, masculine, attracted to women) and women occupy
the right ends. But a person with male anatomy could be attracted to men
(gay man), or could have a gender identity of "woman" (transsexual), or
could have a feminine gender expression on occasion (crossdresser). A
person with female anatomy could identify as a woman, have a somewhat
masculine gender expression, and be attracted to women (butch lesbian).
It's a mix-and-match world, and there are as many combinations as there
are people who think about their gender.
This schema is not necessarily "reality,"
but it's probably closer than the two-box system. Reality is undoubtedly
more complex. Each of the four scales could be broken out into several
scales. For instance, the sex scale could be expanded into separate
scales for external genitalia, internal reproductive organs, hormone
levels, chromosome patterns, and so forth. An individual would probably
not fall on the same place on each of these. "Biological sex" is a
summary of scores for several variables.
There are conditions that exist that don't
fit anywhere on a continuum: some people have neither the XX (typical
female) chromosomal pattern nor the XY pattern typical of males, but it
is not clear that other patterns, such as just X, belong anywhere on the
scale between XX and XY. Furthermore, the scales may not be entirely
separate: if gender identity and sexual orientation are found to have a
biological component, they may overlap with the biological sex scale.
Using the model presented here is
something like using a spectrum of colors to view the world, instead of
only black and white. It doesn't fully account for all the complex
shadings that exist, but it gives us a richer, more interesting picture.
Why look at the world in black and white (marred by a few troublesome
shades of gray) when there's a whole rainbow out there?
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