2021
DOI: 10.1177/03063127211056891
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‘A woman and now a man’: The legitimation of sex-assignment surgery in the United States (1849–1886)

Abstract: Throughout much of recorded history, societies that assigned rights and duties based on sex were confounded by people with unclear sex. For the sake of maintaining social and legal order in those contexts, legal systems assigned these people to what they figured was the ‘most dominant’ sex. Then, in mid-19th century United States, a new classification mechanism emerged: sex-assignment surgery, which was imagined by some surgeons to ‘fix’ one’s physical and legal sex status permanently. Other surgeons, however,… Show more

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Cited by 2 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…Robert Knox (1791-1862), Edinburgh anatomist, thought that all fetuses began with both male and female anatomy [48,49]. In his 1750 publication entitled A Dissertation on Hermaphrodites, George Arnaud de Ronsil, a surgeon in London, reported "that people with unclear sex in Europe visited surgeons to relieve pain or treat cosmetic issues" [50,51].…”
Section: Sex and Gendermentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Robert Knox (1791-1862), Edinburgh anatomist, thought that all fetuses began with both male and female anatomy [48,49]. In his 1750 publication entitled A Dissertation on Hermaphrodites, George Arnaud de Ronsil, a surgeon in London, reported "that people with unclear sex in Europe visited surgeons to relieve pain or treat cosmetic issues" [50,51].…”
Section: Sex and Gendermentioning
confidence: 99%