<p>Amanda Lock Swarr debunks the centuries old claim โhermaphroditismโ and intersex are disproportionately common among black South Africans by interrogating how contemporary intersex medicine its indivisibility from colonial ideologies and scientific racism.</p>
Envisioning African Intersex: Challenging Colonial and Racist Legacies in South African Medicine
โ Scribed by Amanda Lock Swarr
- Publisher
- Duke University Press
- Year
- 2023
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 243
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
Since the 1600s, travelers, scientists, and doctors have claimed that โhermaphroditismโ and intersex are disproportionately common among black South Africans. In Envisioning African Intersex Amanda Lock Swarr debunks this claim by interrogating contemporary intersex medicine and demonstrating its indivisibility from colonial ideologies and scientific racism. Tracing the history of racialized research that underpins medical and scientific premises of gendered bodies, Swarr analyzes decolonial actions by intersex South Africans from the 1990s to the present, centering the work of organizers such as Sally Gross, the first openly intersex activist in Africa and a global pioneer of intersex legislation. Swarr also explores African social media activism that advocates for intersex justice and challenges the mistreatment of South African Olympian Caster Semenya. Throughout, Swarr shows how activists displace doctorsโ impositions to fashion self-representation. By unseating colonial visions of gender, intersex South Africans are actively disrupting medical violence, decolonizing gender binaries, and inciting policy changes.
All author royalties from Envisioning African Intersex will be donated to Intersex South Africa.
โฆ Table of Contents
Contents
Introduction. Pathologizing Gender Binaries
Part I. Uncovering: Colonial and Apartheid Legacies
1 Colonial Observations and Fallacies: โHermaphroditismโ in Histories of South Africa
2 โIntersex in Four South African Racial Groups in Durbanโ: Visualizing Scientific Racism and Gendered Medicine
Part II. Recovering: Decolonial Intersex Interventions
3 Defying Medical Violence and Social Death: Sally Gross and the Inception of South African Intersex Activism
4 #HandsOffCaster: Caster Semenyaโs Refusals and the Decolonization of Gender Testing
5 Toward an โAfrican Intersex Reference of Intelligenceโ: Directions in Intersex Organizing
Epilogue. Reframing Visions of South African Intersex
Acknowledgments
Appendix 1: Compilation of Works by and Featuring Sally Gross
Appendix 2: Cited Twitter Posts Referencing Caster Semenya
Appendix 3: African Intersex Movement Priorities (2017, 2019, 2020)
Notes
References
Index
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
Muslim family law in Africa is as resilient today as it was during the first part of the twentieth century when millions of Africans were subject to French and British colonial administrations. And though these administrations have been gone for decades, their legacies continue to haunt Islamic leg
<p><span>In</span><span> Encountering Empire</span><span>,</span><span>Elisabeth Engel</span><span>traces how black American missionaries โ men and women grappling with their African heritage โ established connections in Africa during the heyday of European colonialism. Reconstructing the black Amer
African Customary Law in South Africa: Post-Apartheid and Living Law Perspectives provides a clear introduction to indigenous law in South Africa. The text provides a structure for understanding the nature and overarching system of customary law, illustrating its distinctness in relation to other ar
For more than half a century before World War II, black South Africans and "American Negroes"-a group that included African Americans and black West Indians-established close institutional and personal relationships that laid the necessary groundwork for the successful South African and American ant