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Gender truths: Disordered identity reproductions in a gender identity clinic

Posted on:2005-12-26Degree:Ph.DType:Dissertation
University:University of Toronto (Canada)Candidate:Gotlib, LesleyFull Text:PDF
GTID:1455390011950374Subject:Anthropology
Abstract/Summary:
This ethnography explores the production of a biomedical and cultural category of gender in the psychiatric assessment and diagnosis of Gender Identity Disorder. The focus of inquiry is the clinical encounter between Canadian psychiatric and psychological practitioners and patients, which includes parents and their children who are considered to have a non-conforming gender identity. In the frame of critical-interpretive medical anthropology, this research describes the scientific processes by which a certain kind of medicalized knowledge of gender identity is preserved despite the presence of divergent ideas about the foundation and function of gender in the patient population. How clinical practices around Gender Identity Disorder themselves reiterate and constitute the cultural conditions for the gender disorder to exist is illustrated.; This project also considers the relationship between the cultural categories of sex, gender, and sexuality as it is enacted in the clinical setting and as it is significant to notions of social and moral personhood. How are these categories connected in the psychiatric model and for whom are these connections useful? Clinical interviews between parents of children with intersex conditions (i.e. congenital disorders of sexual ambiguity) and gender clinicians further reveal the social and political criteria by which categories of persons are granted legitimizing cultural status. The role that biomedicine plays in such a value-laden process more generally is explored.
Keywords/Search Tags:Gender, Cultural, Disorder
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