Intersex

Intersex people are people born with any variation in sex characteristics including chromosomes, gonads, sex hormones, or genitals that do not fit the typical definitions of male or female bodies.

An intersex person may have any gender identity. They may agree with their assigned gender; in this case, they would be described as either ipsogender or cisgender, although the usage of the term cisgender is controversial with regard to intersex people. They may think of themselves as transgender, genderqueer, nonbinary, etc. An intersex person who feels that their intersex status has influenced their gender identity may identify as intergender or amalgagender. Some intersex people think of their intersex status as belonging to the broader range of LGBTIQAP identities.

Not everyone who identifies as nonbinary is necessarily intersex, and instead may be dyadic (not intersex). Other common terms for "not intersex" are perisex and endosex.

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

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.

Notable people
Some notable people who were born intersex and define their gender outside the Western gender binary include:


 * Canadian writer and filmmaker Alec Butler (b. 1959) says they/he is two-spirit, intersex, and nonbinary.
 * Salvadoran-American filmmaker, actor, model River Gallo says they are genderqueer and genderfluid.
 * British comedian, counsellor, and playwright Seven Graham (b. 1969) is transmasc and nonbinary.
 * Hans Lindahl, Communications Director at interAct, an intersex advocacy group, is trans, nonbinary, and genderqueer.
 * Indian activist Gopi Shankar Madurai (b. 1991), founder of Srishti Madurai, a student collective for gender and sexual minorities. says ze is nonbinary and genderqueer.
 * New Zealander Mani Bruce Mitchell (b. 1953), founder of the Intersex Trust Aotearoa New Zealand (ITANZ), describes themself as intersex and nonbinary.
 * American activist Jim Sinclair (b. 1940), one of the founders of Autism Network International (ANI), is intersex and was subjected as a child to conversion therapy in attempts to make them conform to their assigned gender. In 1997 Jim wrote that they were "proudly neuter, both physically and socially."
 * Latinx American writer Hida Viloria (b. 1968), author of Born Both: An Intersex Life, says s/he is genderfluid.
 * American writer Gigi Raven Wilbur (b. 1955), one of the creators of Celebrate Bisexuality Day, says s/he   is intersex and underwent nonconsensual surgery and masculinizing hormone treatments as a child. Some of the words Gigi has used to identify are "hermaphrodite", "third gender", and "ladyboy".