Alison Shaw is a Senior Research Fellow at the University of Oxford, Department of Public Health. Her research interests include medical anthropology, ethnicity, kinship and social aspects of genetics. Her publications include Kinship and Continuity: Pakistani families in Britain (Harwood/Routledge 2000); A Pakistani Community in Britain (Oxford: Blackwell 1888) and Get by in Hindi and Urdu (1989 BBC Books).
List of illustrations
Preface
Shirley Ardener
Chapter 1. Changing sex and bending gender: an introduction
Alison Shaw
Chapter 2. Is it a boy, or a girl? The challenges of genital ambiguity
Alison Shaw
Chapter 3. Why should biological sex be decisive? Transsexualism before the European Court of Human Rights
Marie-Bénédicte Dembour
Chapter 4. Two views on the gender identity of Byzantine eunuchs
Shaun Tougher
Chapter 5. The third sex in Albania: an ethnographic note
Roland Littlewood and Antonia Young
Chapter 6. Living like men, loving like women: tomboi in the Southern Philippines
Mark Johnson
Chapter 7. One of the gals who's one of the guys: men, masculinity and drag performance in North America
Fiona Moore
Chapter 8. Male dames and female boys: cross-dressing in the English pantomime
Shirley Ardener
Chapter 9. Cross-dressing on the Japanese stage
Brian Powell
Notes on contributors
Index
Anthropologists and historians have shown us that 'male' and 'female' are variously defined historically and cross-culturally. The contributions to this volume focus on the voluntary and involuntary, temporary or permanent transformation of gender identity. Overall, this volume provides powerful and compelling illustrations of how, across a wide range of cultures, processes of gender transformation are shaped within, and ultimately constrained by, social and political context. From medical responses to biological ambiguity, legal responses to cases brought by transsexuals, the historical role of the eunuch in Byzantium, the social transformation of gender in Northern Albania and in the Southern Philippines, to North American 'drag' shows, English pantomime and Japanese kabuki theatre, this volume offers revealing insights into the ambiguities and limitations of gender transformation.