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University of Liverpool, UK

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ISSN 1434-4599



Volume 1, Number 1, July - September 1997




The Medicalization of Gender Migration.

By S. Hirschauer, Ph.D.

Citation: Hirschauer S (1997) The Medicalization of Gender Migration.
IJT 1,1, http://www.symposion.com/ijt/ijtc0104.htm

Abstract
The social construction of genders/sexes
Transsexuality: gender migration with falsified bodies
The medical shaping of gender migration
'Sex change' as an implantation of gender identity
References

Abstract

This paper offers a sociological view of the medical treatment of transsexualism.Based on a theoretical notion of sex/gender as a social construction, it conceives of transsexuality as a culturally specific case of gender migration, characterized by the notion of a falsified body. The paper asks how medicine is involved in the very constitution of this phenomenon. Four aspects are indicated: Medical practices shape gender migration into transsexuality a) by turning it into a property of individuals with a 'transsexual substance', b) by devaluing earlier forms of gender migration, c) by reducing gender oscillations to single events, and d) by implanting a so called 'gender identity' into bodies.

This paper originates in a research tradition on transsexualism which has not been recognized in medical and psychological debates during the 30 years since it started in the team of Robert Stoller at the University of California, Los Angeles. So what it tells may appear rather strange to medical readers. They should take it as an invitation to look at sex, gender, change of gender and at their own work from an external point of view. It is the perspective of cultural anthropology applied to our own culture. Taking this stance requires a detailed investigation into the meaning of cultural practices. The founder of this research tradition within sociology was Harold Garfinkel. One of his first studies was a piece on a transsexual woman being treated by Stoller's team in Los Angeles. While Stoller developed his famous hypothesis of a 'biological force' in gender identity development from her faked account, his sociological colleague followed the question 'how is this person able to convincingly portray herself in talk and appearance as a natural, normal woman? How does she accomplish this social fact still without medical help, only using her biographical accounts, style of clothing, gestures, facial expression and voice?'
Garfinkel developed a sociological notion of gender as social practice which he formulatedlike this: "members make happen, ...members' practices alone produce the observable-tellable normal sexuality of persons, and do so only, entirely, exclusively in actual... witnessed displays of common talk and conduct" (Garfinkel 1967: 181).

The social construction of genders/sexes

In later sociological studies on the social construction of genders/sexes (Kessler/McKenna 1978, West/Zimmerman 1987, Lindemann 1993, Hirschauer 1993) this cultural practice was called 'doing gender'. In order to observe this practice it is not necessary to presume a gender identity, not even to presume 'sex' as a corporeal basis. Both the gender identity of an individual and the physical state of her body are in most interactions derived from how a person communicates her sex membership. We always attribute to a person's presentation of herself that he/she has certain anatomical features under her clothes and a certain identity under her skin. But the most important space in which the distinction between two sexes is actually brought about is its enactment in everyday interaction.
Members of our society are confronted with the sex distinction from the beginning of their life: in the deciphering of the gray shadows of ultrasound pictures or - more important for the legal fixing of gender - at birth. Knowing that the strange creature emerging there must be either a 'boy' or a 'girl', a doctor or a midwife take certain anatomical features as a 'good reason' to apply a sex category to the baby, uttering, for example, "It's a girl".
There is nothing biologically necessary in this act - as the birth-classification of race just abolished in South-Africa isn't biologically necessary. The midwife's utterance does not simply 'describe nature' but it reestablishes the convention of treating certain anatomical features as cultural signs, i.e. as insignia of a sex category. But there are still more specialized places in modern societies where the sexes are distinguished (Hirschaue, is not taken as a 'good reason' to call a baby a boy, but as 'good stuff' to make a vagina from. Both acts give meaning to a piece of body which is indifferent to whether and how it should be treated and classified.
When we look at the actual workings of these gender determination methods we find them all rooted somehow in the everyday method of attributing and presenting gender in interaction. In order to tell how much testosterone and estrogens males and females have you first have to distinguish men and women. In order to tell which sex has which chromosome structure you first have to distinguish men and women. So there are rather specialized methods to differentiate men and women, but it is the everyday life method we all use routinely which determines what the categories of man and woman mean. In the last 15 years several studies were carried out in the sociology and history of science which showed in detail how the practices and theories of sexual differentiation are embedded in specific historical contexts and cultural interpretations (e.g. Laqueur 1990). On the background of this research on scientific and everyday practices a distinction which is fundamental in the medical treatment of transsexuals doesn't make sense in sociology: the distinction between sex and gender.
Within a notion of gender as cultural practice there is no space and no need for a body as a presocial biological entity. The body is an always implied 'something' in practices like embodying sex categories orally and visually or taking blood samples and passing them through test tubes and computer programs. As cultural anthropologist Mary Douglas (1970) said: "there is no 'natural' perception and description of the human body which is free from the dimension of the Social".

Transsexuality: gender migration with falsified bodies

At this point one might ask how one can conceive of transsexuality in such terms, if not describing it in terms of a contradiction between sex and gender. In terms of a cultural practice one can begin to perceive transsexuality as a highly specific case of gender mobility - to use a notion of David King (1993). Historical and anthropological research (e.g. Amadiume 1987, Williams 1986, Bullough 1974, 1975, Perry 1987) revealed an enormous variety of this phenomenon: e.g. the ritual redefinition of female newborns as male when there was no hereditary successor in native North American tribes; or the reclassification of infertile women as fully acknowledged men in some African societies. But these phenomena still have a completely different frame of meaning from transsexuality. We become more specific looking at cases where since the European Middle-Ages people have changed their public appearance in order to make sense of their same sex sexual preference as a legitimate kind of relationship, sometimes oscillating between the sexes. Another case more closely related to transsexuality in terms of a practice is the juridical revocation of birth attribution which was granted to 18-year-old hermaphrodites until the end of the 19th century in Europe (Hirschauer 1992b).
Both cases have a similar structure which I suggest calling 'gender migration'. They start with a rather individualistic claim to the style of living granted to the other sex: its appearances, occupations, sexual preferences, rights and duties. It is a membership claim in the form of a delayed revocation of birth attribution: "No, I'm a boy". Such a revocation
leads to a conflict between, on the one hand, a person making a verbal claim to being one gender and, on the other hand, people in her environment who believe her to be the other gender because of the public appearance or their past knowledge of this person. Two parties emerge here: a majority of people, embarrassed by a severe interruption of the routine workings of their classificatory practices, and a tiny minority of people turned into strangers in their own social environment.
Now the specific transsexual way of making sense of this situation consists of turning the social conflict into a personal one, using the formula of "a female (or male) soul within a wrong body". It is well documented that this formula was invented by a sexual subculture of the 19th century calling itself 'homosexuals' - a genealogical predecessor of transsexuals.
But how can one understand its usage in order to make sense of gender migration? On the one hand, one can understand the rhetoric of the soul politically: a rather isolated stranger who wants to deny that anatomical features are fundamental signs of her identity is in a weak position. Instead of bluntly claiming to be the other gender and simply living it, it is a more modest rhetoric of subjectively 'feeling' it inside and looking for an affirmation of this feeling - whatever it should consist of.
On the other hand, the experience of being in the wrong body can be understood historically: in the 19th century one first finds the expression of a moral sense that homosexual deviants have the wrong body for their sexual preferences: "what we do is not wrong, what is wrong is our body". At the end of the 19th century this wrongness received a theoretical meaning when a biological etiology and symptomatology for so-called 'homosexuals' was developed. Finally, since the 1920s the wrongness took on a pragmatic meaning with the development of genital surgery. Now a body can be experienced as 'wrong' because it can be corrected. So, overaccentuating the kinship of homosexuality and transsexuality, one could say that transsexuals claim the very body from medicine which it formerly imputed to homosexuals: they execute the 'sexual inversion'.

The medical shaping of gender migration

Establishing transsexuality, we have arrived at a form of gender migration which denies and renews the symbolic value of genitals for personal identity. The body becomes a part of gender migrants' claims. This specific cultural shape of gender migration is inconceivable without modern medicine, i.e. without professionals who are addressed by the way transsexuals formulate their claim and who are also approached by society to decide its validity and to solve the arising conflicts.
We can therefore ask: what happened to gender migration when medicine became involved?
In which ways did the establishment of interdisciplinary treatment programs shape the
phenomenon?
The medicalization of gender migration started with a translation of social conflicts into conflicts between medical experts. There are three types of such expert controversies:
First the social conflict of whose gender definition must adapt itself to another gender definition was transformed into a question of treatment: whether one should adapt psychiatrically the soul to the body or surgically the body to the soul.
Secondly, the cultural conflicts as to the validity of gender migrants' claims were transformed into theoretical controversies on nosological classification: when transsexuality was labeled a psychotic condition, a neuroendocrinopathy, a borderline syndrome or a creative defense mechanism, all these theoretical classifications implied a political position on one of the sides of the social conflict.
Thirdly, gender migrants' duties to legitimize their claim were transformed into a problem of legitimizing medical treatment: the disunity of people in families and at places of work as to the gender of a member was transformed into heated medical debates on professional ethics concerning the legitimacy of genital surgery.
These debates are largely settled now on the basis of shared responsibility and careful controls of the treatment. One of the intellectual means of pacifying professional controversies was the establishment of a professional demarcation line I already mentioned: the distinction between sex and gender, neatly separating professional domains. Now what have been the effects of these translations of conflict on the phenomenon of gender migration? I think there are two: an individualizing effect and a differentiating one.
Firstly, the phenomenon is framed in individualistic terms. The medical profession on does not primarily deal with social relations (like the law, e.g.) but with individual pathologies. In psychoanalytical terms, for instance, the gender migrants' acts of self-definition are transformed into a symptom which is not true or false but significant. The statement "I am a woman" is not regarded as a sentence a speaker uses to designate an object in the world but as a sign that reveals something interesting about the speaker. The social conflict is transformed into an 'inner conflict'. But in genetic terms, too, the phenomenon is located inside the gender migrant. It isn't framed in terms of claims or style of living, but in terms of a condition which a person is forced to suffer from. Gender migration under medical direction have become a property of individuals, incorporated in them as a transsexual substance - be it a gender identity or a hormonal defect.
From the perspective of society this location of the phenomenon within gender migrants is a location outside society. So the first medical offer to society is to theoretically 'heal' the 'traumatization' of a taken for granted world of two sexes. A universe of meaning is maintained by 'explaining' gender migrants' claims to a style of living from their individual
condition.
The differentiating effect has its most obvious side in the standard diagnostic procedures of selecting candidates for surgery. The psychiatric gatekeepers have to care for patients who are good co-workers of the medical enterprise. This has two reasons: Firstly, medical authority and reputation has been invested into gender migration and has to be regained
from a successful treatment. 'Relapses' of transsexuals would endanger the legitimacy of medicine's involvement. Secondly, patients have to be protected from false treatment.
Doctors' responsibility and worries introduce another dichotomy into a change between the sexes: the distinction between right and wrong treatment. Professionals' doubts about the adequacy of treatment are translated into diagnostic distinctions between true and false transsexuals. But there are also preclinical selection processes which turn gender migrants into candidates for surgery. The public representation of genital surgery as a 'sex change' - propagated by journalists and, unfortunately, some surgeons as well - did not simply stimulate a high quantitative demand for surgery. It had more of a qualitative effect on the subtle processes of self-definition of gender migrants:
The so-called sex change operation devalued earlier forms of gender migration, which had been labeled transvestitism, and which now appear as a mere change of clothes instead of the 'radical' change of skin. Furthermore, the operations appeared to be upgraded by the diagnostic controls of access to it: they look like prizes at the end of a long road of tests. So the surgical transformation of genitals is like a challenge which differentiates gender migrants into two camps: it either transforms the longings it claims to satisfy into a demand for medical services - or it devalues them to a mere wish without authenticity because it lacks medical consequence. So lot of the strong motivation doctors encounter in their patients is mobilized by the medical treatment itself.
A second step in this involvement of medicine in the motivation for an operation happens in psychotherapy. Again, the question of the authenticity of the claim on sex membership is being questioned when professionals are interested in the subjective meaning of a gender migrant's 'inner conflicts'. The psychological interest in the transsexual subject further stimulates gender migrants to objectify their claim and to look for physical proof in order to get rid of the question "what are the reasons for your claim".

'Sex change' as an implantation of gender identity

In terms of the social conflict gender migration starts with the treatment of transsexuals offers a settlement to the two parties: the genital operations on transsexuals confirm 'them' in their assertion that they really are the other sex now, but by establishing it by a so-called 'sex change' they also prove to 'us' that they were not the other sex before. For transsexuals, the new pieces of body are objective proof of their gender not only because they are visibly 'there' but because anyone who denied their objectivity would have to bear the costs of their removal, i.e. would have to argue for a repetition of the medical interventions. So the burden of reasoning has shifted. On the other hand, the medical treatment has tied transsexuals to staying in their new gender: in the beginning, they were urged to 'feel' a gendered soul only as a rhetoric, suggested by their small chances in a social conflict. At the end of a treatment, which constantly made them feel being the other gender they are forced to have a gendered soul by the necessity of living with the effects of medical treatment: with the stories and convictions once uttered in psychiatry, with the habitus gained in the everyday test, and with the sexual features produced by endocrinology and surgery. The treatment of transsexuals somehow 'buries' their claim very deeply in them, because after the irreversible alteration of their bodies 'regret' is nothing to be confessed easily, let alone an option that could be lived. In other words: the treatment materially constructs a gender identity as part of a person's sex. Both, sex and gender identity, belong to the deep structure of the practices of gender.
The fact that the treatment of transsexuals is so successful to make 'relapses' a rare public occurrence has another effect on the cultural shape of gender migration: it is reduced to single events. The prevention of constant shifting between genders is the most influential factor precluding a strong transsexual subculture: most gender migrants only pass through small communities which would grow enormously without the medically organized fluctuation (as they immediately do when gender migration is framed as 'transgenderism' and grows up from the medical 'kindergarten').
The medicalization of gender migration framed this phenomenon into a highly contradictory picture: Surgery, which seemed to radically surmount the anatomic boundary between the sexes, on the other hand confirms with its genital transformations that anatomy remains crucial. And psychiatric theories of transsexuality developed a notion of a constant, never-changing gender identity determined early in life precisely from those persons who actually change their gender during their life.
So in transsexuality the very axioms of our cultural assumptions about the sexes are proved and denied: that sex membership is rooted in the body and that it is of lifelong continuity. This picture puzzle mirrors all contradictions and irritations our culture externalizes through its transsexual freaks. They are medical personifications of cultural troubles. So transsexuality has cast a soft shadow on the fact that large parts of the population of Western culture have themselves become gender migrating: in claiming occupations, political positions, behavioral styles and sexual partners formerly reserved for the other sex.
In political terms one can call this process 'emancipation'. In sociological terms one better conceives of it as a continuous loss of social functions of the sexual distinction. This has its emancipatory side, but it also has the side of lost orientations and insecurity. In this cultural condition the medicalization of gender migration offers us 'normals' an opportunity to distinguish ourselves from those strangers. Medicine presents us a phenomenon which characterizes our whole century as a peculiar condition, far away from what we are. So if we feel unsure of what we mean by being a 'man' or a 'woman', we can at least look at transsexuals and their doctors: they seem to know...

References

Amadiume I. (1987) Male Daughters and Female Husbands. Gender and Sex in an African Society. London: Zed.

Bullough V. (1974) Transvestites in the middle ages. American Journal of Sociology 79: 1381-1394

Bullough V. (1975) Transsexualism in history. Archives of Sexual Behavior 4: 561-571

Douglas M. (1970) Natural Symbols. Explorations in Cosmology. London: Barrie &Jenkins.

Garfinkel H. (1967) Studies in Ethnomethodology. Englewood Cliffs: Prentice Hall.

Hirschauer S. (1992) The Meanings of Transsexuality. In: J.Lachmund and G.Stollberg
(ed.) The Social Construction of Illness. Stuttgart/New York: Steiner.

Hirschauer S. (1992b) Hermaphroditen, Homosexuelle und Geschlechtswechsler
Transsexualitaet als historisches Projekt. In: Pfaefflin F/Junge A (ed.) Geschlechts-umwandlung. Abhandlungen zur Transsexualitaet. Stuttgart: Schattauer.

Hirschauer S. (1993) Die soziale Konstruktion der Transsexualitaet. Ueber die Medizin und den Geschlechtswechsel. Frankfurt: Suhrkamp

Hirschauer S. (1997) Performing Sex and Gender in Medical Practices. In: Berg M/Mol A (ed.) Differences in Medicine. Duke University Press (forthcoming)

Kessler S/McKenna W. (1978) Gender: An Ethnomethodological Approach. New York: Wiley.

King D. (1993) The transvestite and the transsexual: public categories and private identities. Aldershot: Avebury.

Laqueur T. (1993) Making Sex. Body and Gender from the Greeks to Freud. Cambridge: Harvard University Press.

Lindemann G. (1993) Das paradoxe Geschlecht. Frankfurt: Fischer.

Perry ME. (1987) The manly woman: a historical case study. American Behavioral Scientist, 31: 86-100

West C/Zimmerman DH. (1987) Doing Gender. Gender & Society 1: 125-151.
Williams W. (1986) The spirit and the flesh. Sexual diversity of American Indian culture. Boston: Beacon Press.

Correspondence and requests for materials to:
Stefan Hirschauer
University of Bielefeld
Faculty of Sociology
PF 100131
33501 Bielefeld
Germany
e-mail: stefan.hirschauer@post.uni-bielefeld.de