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To understand masculine and feminine social and political history in the second half of the 20th century, one must first understand the lexical history of the term gender, which did not become an attribute of human beings until 1955 when John Money introduced the concept of gender role to refer to the masculine or feminine presentation of individuals whose genital organs, by reason of birth defect, were anatomically neither completely male or completely female, but hermaphroditic. In this book, Money explores the history of gender differentiation and its impact on contemporary, postmodern social constructionist explanations of male and female. He argues that the nature vs nurture dichotomy should be abandoned in favour of a paradigm of nature/critical period/nurture. The book further discusses how some gender differences are phylogenetically shared by all people and others are ontologically unique to an individual.
John Money was Professor of Paediatrics and Medical Psychology at Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, USA.
Introduction1. Lexical History and Constructionist Ideology of Gender2. New Phylism Theory, Male and Female Gender3. Four Categories of Gender Coding4. Feminism Before and After Gender5. Sexual Counterreformation6. Gendermaps7. Mismatched Gendermaps8. Public Policy MismatchingAppendixBibliographyIndex
Stephen Whittle, UK) Whittle, Stephen (Manchester Metropolitan University, Kate More, Stephen Whittle, UK) Whittle, Stephen (Manchester Metropolitan University
Stephen Whittle, UK) Whittle, Stephen (Manchester Metropolitan University, Kate More, Stephen Whittle, UK) Whittle, Stephen (Manchester Metropolitan University