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Sexes: Difference between revisions

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→‎Sexes of nonhuman animals: Intersex "conditions" is extremely offensive and a form of intermisia. It pathologicalizes and invalidates people who often, but not always, use intersex to describe their diverse sex characteristics. This pathologicalization invokes a long history and ongoing institutionalized violence where babies and children in the intersex community are often mutilated against their will in hospitals to fit the flawed sex characteristic binary ideology.
(→‎Biological essentialism: Separating "trans and nonbinary" insinuates nonbinary people like me (although I use different terminology to describe myself) are not really trans, even though a lot us use trans to describe ourselves. This insinuates we're not valid. This reinforces nonbinarymisia.)
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(→‎Sexes of nonhuman animals: Intersex "conditions" is extremely offensive and a form of intermisia. It pathologicalizes and invalidates people who often, but not always, use intersex to describe their diverse sex characteristics. This pathologicalization invokes a long history and ongoing institutionalized violence where babies and children in the intersex community are often mutilated against their will in hospitals to fit the flawed sex characteristic binary ideology.)
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==Sexes of nonhuman animals==
==Sexes of nonhuman animals==
[[File:ZwitterHauhechelblaeuling.jpg|thumb|A Common Blue (''Polyommatus icarus'') individual that is a gynandromorph, having a female form on one side and male on the other. Gynandromorphs occur in some animal species.]]
[[File:ZwitterHauhechelblaeuling.jpg|thumb|A Common Blue (''Polyommatus icarus'') individual that is a gynandromorph, having a female form on one side and male on the other. Gynandromorphs occur in some animal species.]]
One common misconception is that all animals have only male and female sexes. However, nature is much more complex and varied. Many animal species are known to have a variety of intersex conditions, or very different kinds of sexes than occur among humans. For example: male seahorses that get pregnant, fish that change sex if there aren't enough of a particular sex in their group, female deer with antlers, lionesses with manes, lizards that lay fertile eggs after two females mate together (''parthenogenesis''), hyenas that give birth through an organ that is nearly indistinguishable from a penis, and so on. Most animals don't have sex chromosomes that are the same as the XX or XY set that are most common in humans. Learning about the diversity of animal sexes can help one recognize how much the sexes are an idea constructed by humans to describe and simplify reality, but our understanding of that reality tends to be limited by our own sexual stereotypes widespread in our culture.  
One common misconception is that all animals have only male and female sexes. However, nature is much more complex and varied. Many animal species are known to have a variety of diverse sex characteristics, or very different kinds of sexes than occur among humans. For example: male seahorses that get pregnant, fish that change sex if there aren't enough of a particular sex in their group, female deer with antlers, lionesses with manes, lizards that lay fertile eggs after two females mate together (''parthenogenesis''), hyenas that give birth through an organ that is nearly indistinguishable from a penis, and so on. Most animals don't have sex chromosomes that are the same as the XX or XY set that are most common in humans. Learning about the diversity of animal sexes can help one recognize how much the sexes are an idea constructed by humans to describe and simplify reality, but our understanding of that reality tends to be limited by our own sexual stereotypes widespread in our culture.  


To learn more about the diversity of animal sexes, read Joan Roughgarden's book, ''Evolution’s Rainbow: Diversity, Gender, and Sexuality in Nature and People'' (2009).
To learn more about the diversity of animal sexes, read Joan Roughgarden's book, ''Evolution’s Rainbow: Diversity, Gender, and Sexuality in Nature and People'' (2009).
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