Review
This book is an invaluable resource in the ongoing discourse on the clinical management of intersexuality --
Walter Bockting, assistant professor, Program in Human Sexuality, University of Minnesota Medical SchoolThis work is compassionate, intelligent, and beautifully written, and promises to be well read and highly valued --
Alice Dreger, author of Hermaphrodites and the Medical Invention of Sex
Product Description
Approximately one in every two thousand infants born in the United States each year is sexually ambiguous in such a way that doctors cannot immediately determine the childs sex. Some childrens chromosomal sexuality contradicts their sexual characteristics. Others have the physical traits of both sexes, or of neither.
Drawing upon life history interviews with adults who were treated for intersexuality as children, Sharon E. Preves explores how such individuals experience and cope with being labeled sexual deviants in a society that demands sexual conformity. By demonstrating how intersexed people manage and create their own identities, often in conflict with their medical diagnosis, Preves argues that medical intervention into intersexuality often creates, rather than mitigates, the stigma these people suffer.
See all Editorial Reviews