Intersex

Revision as of 11:34, 4 August 2017 by Ondo (talk | contribs) (1 revision imported: import from nonbinary.wiki)
Text lines white icon.svg This article is a stub. You can help the Nonbinary wiki by expanding it!
Note to editors: remember to always support the information you proved with external references!

Intersex people have some aspect of their physical sex that is inconsistent with conventional ideas of male and female sex. This difference is in their primary or secondary sexual characteristics, hormones, or chromosomes.

File:Intersexflag.png
In 2013, the Organisation Intersex International (OII) Australia created this intersex pride flag. The circle symbolizes wholeness, and the colors are meant to not be derivatives of pink (female) or blue (male).
Participants at the third International Intersex Forum held in Malta, December 2013.

An intersex person may have any gender identity. They may agree with their assigned gender (cisgender), or they may think of themselves as transgender, or it may be more complicated. They may or may not think of themselves as being part of the LGBTIQAP spectrum.

A person with a non-binary gender is not necessarily intersex, and instead may be dyadic (not intersex).

Intersex was one of the 56 genders made available on Facebook in 2014.[1]

Dyadism

Dyadism is a common kind of sexism, the belief that humans are strictly dyadic, having only two sexes. In action, dyadism is discrimination against intersex people. That discrimination can include erasure, harassment, medical malpractice, lack of marriage rights, religious intolerance, human rights violations, and hate crimes against intersex people. Dyadism is also the basis of other forms of sexism, including binarism, the belief that people have only two genders.

Because of dyadism, doctors think of intersex conditions as an irregularity. As a result, intersex people were given so-called "normalizing" or "corrective" surgeries, often at a very young age, and without their consent.

Related

External links

References

  1. Eve Shapiro, Gender circuits: Bodies and identities in a technological age. Unpaged.
  This page, licensed as CC-BY-SA 4.0, has been imported from the old nonbinary.wiki using the same or a compatible license. It is part of nonbinary.wiki's import of the original Nonbinary Wiki and is licensed under CC BY 3.0.