Transgreded Men & Women
by Roberta Angela Dee
Transgendered people have been known throughout the course of human history.
The North American Cheyenne refer to the he man eh, the Lakota refer to the
winkte, and the Navajo refer to the nadle. These are merely different names for
the same "two-spirited" individuals.
Many cultures perceive transgendered, or "two-spirited" individuals are
perceived as being blessed. It is unfortunate that in our supposedly
"enlightened" Western culture, transgendered people are frequently perceived as
"mentally ill."
The psychiatric classification of expressions of gender identity, as defined in
the Fourth Edition of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders,
or DSM-IV, is examined here. Regarding the transgender categories Transvestic
Fetishism, (302.3), and Gender Identity Disorder, (302.85), raise a number of
important concerns:
This document uses language that is ambiguous. Conflicting language in
Transvestic Fetishism criteria has led to confusion regarding its intent.
Confusion within professional and academic circles is worsened when discussion
reaches the lay community. Although transvesticism is labeled a "fetishism," it
is not clearly stated whether or not its practice must be sexual in nature to
qualify for diagnosis. Nor is it clear as to whether treatment is recommended
for well adjusted subjects.
In 1973, the American Psychiatric Association eliminated homosexuality as a
mental disorder from the DSM-II. Religious radicals, in particular, right-wing
conservative Christians, continue to perceive homosexuality as a moral disorder.
Nevertheless, it is unclear as to why gender orientation (preference) and
sexual orientation are treated so differently in the DSM.
The associations criteria for diagnosing transgendered individuals serves to
promote invalid stereotypes, and fails to reflect the diversity within the
transgendered community. Moreover, Transvestic Fetishism is classified as a
paraphilia, legitimizing stereotypes that associate cross-gender role with
criminal or harmful conduct -- futher adding to social prejudices.
Instead of exposing cultural and religious misnomers, the DSM promotes cultural
myths that inaccurately describes many transgendered people. In other instances,
the DSM provides information that could easily lead to erroneous conclusions
about the transgendered community.
A growing body of literature regards gender as a social construction, not a
biological imperative. This literature suggests that there are many examples of
"supernumerary gender" precedents in non- western cultures. Such individuals
were accepted and often highly respected societal roles. Gender variation and
fluidity were even considered a normal part of human life.
However, there is a danger in perceiving gender orientation as a social
construction. The danger is that it encourages one to believe that the affected
individual can change their behavior and conform to whatever is perceived as the
social norm or status quo. Most of the evidence suggests that gender preference
cannot be altered, and that transgendered individuals are predisposed to their
condition.
It is true that some transgendered individuals state their awareness of being
transgendered became evident at or near puberty. This, however, does not dismiss
the possibility that the condition existed prior to it manifesting itself in an
individual's life. Puberty itself causes an individual to reexamine his or her
position in society.
Prior to adolescence, there may have been no special reason for the individual
to place any significance on their gender orientation, nor to recall such
orientation later in life.
There are significant reasons to review the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of
Mental Disorders with a reasoned dialogue inclusive of the gender community and
socio-cultural researchers. Medical policy in our society should be open to the
possibility that difference is a disease. Nonconformity is no pathology, and
uniqueness is not an illness.
NOTE: This article is based on a presentation at the 1996 Association of Women
in Psychology Convention: K. Wilson & B. Hammond, "Myth, Stereotype, and
Cross-Gender Identity in the DSM-IV," AWP Feminist Psychology Conference,
Portland OR, March 1996.