Third gender

From Freepedia

Third gender was used from the late 19th century to describe people who did not fit into the then existing gender categories:

  • female genitalia = female identity = female behavior = desire male partner
  • male genitalia = male identity = male behavior = desires female partner

Today this scheme is also known as binary gender system or heteronormativity.

The third gender included (in modern terms):

Third gender was widely used until World War II in Europe. It never went completely out of use, but was kept alive in the subcultures of the people described by it. In recent years it has made a comeback. Occasionally other gender is used instead of third gender. Also, some people who feel they are neither male nor female, but also not androgynous, identify as third-gendered.

Non-Western cultures often had or have accepted gender roles for third-gendered people, for example the American Indian berdache and two-spirit people, the mahu in Polynesia, or the Indian hijras (a.k.a. arivanna).

See also



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