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OK. Gender is a grammatical and cultural descriptor. Which means, as I said, that it is not a biological one.
This really is a pretty obvious statement, Lawrence. Gender is not a physical descriptor. Sex is. Grammarical and cultural decisions about gender are frequently based on the information provided by, among other things, the physical body. I made a number of points about this, both in terms of the universally self-defining nature of gender and the differences between the number of chromosomal structures available being rather more than two, which you have not addressed. I might add that your insistence that gender and sex are the same thing is rather undermined by your wilingness to call your "trannie" friends "she", although clearly they are not *physically* female.
As I say, look in a dictionary. You may have seen this as an insult, but is in fact a request, to save time. In fact, from dictionary.com:
Grammar.
A grammatical category used in the classification of nouns, pronouns, adjectives, and, in some languages, verbs that may be arbitrary or based on characteristics such as sex or animacy and that determines agreement with or selection of modifiers, referents, or grammatical forms.
One category of such a set.
The classification of a word or grammatical form in such a category.
The distinguishing form or forms used.
Sexual identity, especially in relation to society or culture.
The condition of being female or male; sex.
Females or males considered as a group: expressions used by one gender.
Traditionally, gender has been used primarily to refer to the grammatical categories of “masculine,” “feminine,” and “neuter,” but in recent years the word has become well established in its use to refer to sex-based categories, as in phrases such as gender gap and the politics of gender. This usage is supported by the practice of many anthropologists, who reserve sex for reference to biological categories, while using gender to refer to social or cultural categories. According to this rule, one would say The effectiveness of the medication appears to depend on the sex (not gender) of the patient, but In peasant societies, gender (not sex) roles are likely to be more clearly defined. This distinction is useful in principle, but it is by no means widely observed, and considerable variation in usage occurs at all levels.
That, incidentally, is why "tree" is a false trail. Because identifying as a tree has nothing to do with your gender, just as my identification as "tall" has nothing to do with gender.
Now, since we are in a thread discussing gender as a grammatical construct, we can hopefully say that using gender as a synonym for "sex" is not what we are doing, as otherwise we would not be discussing gender as a grammatical construct. So, we are looking at the first two definitions, basically. Which are not actually indistinguishable (see the Hijras, the Berdache, the fafafines, de Fiore - who is a perfect example of somebody victimised by the failure of the society of her time to acknowledge the existence of the possibility of gender roles other than "man" and "woman", since neither described her *sex*) from pheno- or genotypical sex. This is a statement I and others have made and demonstrated many times in many different ways, here and in, say, the "Genderfuck You" thread, but to continue - in the absence of another gender option in their culture, Fausto-Sterling (and, IIRC, the ISNA) believed that people who are born without a clear distinction of the biological characteristics of either *sex* should be raised as belonging to the most appropriate *gender*. If there were three genders and two biological sexes (as, of course, there *are* in the societies mentioned above), then people would have to be assigned to one of those three genders according to a set of criteria relating to matters other than biological sex, which would be in itself inadequate to decide gender - that is, whether that infant was referred to as "he", "she" or the third alternative. See the article above, where somebody was identified as a woman partly by their love of matching calico; that was a hundred plus years ago, and it was already not enough to say "penis - man" or "vagina - woman". They were looking for other gender identifiers.
As for "othering" - well, yes. That's what gender does. You are assuming that "man" and "woman" are not othering, because you are used to them, but it might be useful to think in grammatical terms again. The masculine gender (which is, lest we forget, used in inflected languages for things that are not biologically male) describes a set of rules, the feminine gender another, the neuter gender another. Il est beau. Elle est belle. Das ist gut. bonus, boan, bonum. Likewise, the cultural gender determinant "man" identifies what a person is, and what a person is not (a woman, most obviously. Whether "woman" does the same or merely describes the condition of not being a man is a question for another day). A term describing a third gender, such as "Ihamana" among the Zuni, serves the same function - it says "this person has this gender, and not either of the others". Because not all men are identical, and neither are all women, and so it strikes me as a bit odd to say that a different gender would have to be invented to describe every variation of biological or physiological construction, especially if your genders (like those of, say, the Zuni) are not dependent even on the obvious phenotypical manifestations of the sexual binary.
Now, it strikes me that this is no more othering, and a lot less alienating, than just telling people they have to be "he" or "she", depending on their "biological sex" (do you mean their chromosomal sex or the set of sexual characteristics they might possess after surgery and hormone treatment, btw?), with the "other" category of, say, "they" (which is, btw, an epicene pronoun, just not a very nice one). I agree with you completely that a better solution would probably be to remove gender from the third person singular pronoun altogether, since gender no longer effectively exists in the others because our language is no longer inflected that way (or not inflected that way very often, more precisely), and get the sense from the sentence. Gender can them be separated from that sticky bit of language and become far more enjoyable. This would remove the problem of the use of such a pronoun as a generic singular as well, of course.
(By contrast, for example, Latin very rarely uses subject pronouns at all, because the verb form and the gender of words describing the subject tell you the gender and number of that subject anyway. "iratus canem necavit" can only mean "the angry man (masculine singular) killed the dog, unless it is referring back to another masculine adjective in a previous sentence)
However, like you I believe that this is not currently within the art of the possible to abolish the gendered pronoun. So, I am looking for something that people who do not fit the current gender polarity, regardless of the sexual characteristics they possess - a look at the "Genderfuck you" and "Trans 101" threads might fill in some detail on this, also - can, if they choose, select as an identifying pronoun, so they (actually a plural here - yay!) do not feel shoehorned into "he"ness or "she"ness *against their will*. It is supposed to function (being realistic) as an option, not a panacea. Again, a quick look at lupus thingy's link will show that discussion of the problem of using one word for the generic and gender-variant pronouns, but if one's intention is to minimise structural alterations to the language then one can either adopt this as a course or look at some permutation of "they" as a generic. Again, this is not such an elegant solution as using an epicene pronoun universally, but it is a more swiftly realisable one. |
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