Quote from: NicholeW. on August 09, 2007, 01:05:04 PM
I find androgynes to be gender expressionists rather than a gender identity.
No, no: for some it is clearly an identity, not just a matter of expression -- or in some cases, it can even be
just an identity, without any clearly visible androgyne gender expression.
Also,
gender identity may not be all that uniform either. It's entirely possible to identify as androgyne with respect to social gender (again, with little actual expression) yet have a clear binary gender preference about the anatomy. Or, I have to assume, any combination.
The SoC acknowledges this in a way, to the extent that the desire to reassign anatomical sex to match social gender identity is what defines a transsexual, relative to other flavours of transgendered. That isn't the whole picture, though, especially since it assumes there are only two choices for either (of course with the proviso that the intersexed should be corrected to a real sex).
Nfr