Morgan Holmes

Morgan Holmes
Nationality Canadian
Occupation Professor of sociology
Known for Intersex activist, writer, educator

Morgan Holmes is a Canadian sociologist and a professor at Wilfrid Laurier University, Ontario. She is also an intersex activist and writer, and former member of Intersex Society of North America.

Early life

Holmes underwent a clitorectomy, described as a "clitoral recession", at age 7, at The Hospital for Sick Children in Toronto. This surgery was undertaken because her clitoris "could become erect", and the surgery has affected her life ever since, including repeated pelvic exams, adolescent sexual experiences, fear of intimacy, and feelings of difference and embarrassment. Holmes describes how clinician "promises of sexual normalcy are not being met" by surgical intervention.[1][2]

Holmes refers to herself as "still intersexual" after medical intervention.[3]

Career

Activism

A member of the (now defunct) Intersex Society of North America, Holmes participated in the first North American demonstration about intersex issues, a 1996 demonstration as Hermaphrodites with Attitude outside the Annual Meeting of the American Academy of Pediatrics in Boston.[4][5] The event is now commemorated internationally as Intersex Awareness Day.[6][7] She participated in the second International Intersex Forum in 2012.[8]

Academia

Holmes is a professor of sociology at Wilfrid Laurier University, Ontario, where she describes her academic interests as sexuality and queer theory, feminist thought; qualitative health research and law related to sexuality and health. Holmes has also extended her interest in intersex issues to other forms of bodily diversity, including disability.[9]

Works

Holmes is widely published, including:

when a genetically male child (XY) is considered incapable of achieving "normal" heterosexual activity as a male, he will be reassigned as female even though the micropenis would be functional ... if one is born with a vagina, the appropriate sexual activity will be as receptor and not penetrator. Thus, when a body which has been designated female (either through chromosome testing or anatomical standards) possesses a phallus, the surgical procedure remains roughly the same as that for treating the micropenis: remove the phalloclit in a process of either partial or total clitorectomy.)
much of the existing work on cultural systems that incorporate a "third sex" portray simplistic visions in which societies with more than two sex/gender categories are cast as superior to those that divide the world into just two. I argue that to understand whether a system is more or less oppressive than another we have to understand how it treats its various members, not only its "thirds".

Selected bibliography

Books

Journals and articles

References

  1. Holmes, Morgan (May 1996). "Is Growing up in Silence Better Than Growing up Different?". Chrysalis Special Issue on Intersexuality. Intersex Society of North America.
  2. Kopun, Francine (April 30, 2010). "Neither male nor female: The secret life of intersex people". Toronto Star.
  3. Dreger, Alice Domurat (2009). Hermaphrodites and the Medical Invention of Sex. Harvard University Press. p. 254. ISBN 9780674034334.
  4. 1 2 Holmes, Morgan (17 October 2015). "When Max Beck and Morgan Holmes went to Boston". Intersex Day. Retrieved 2015-10-24.
  5. "Hermaphrodites with Attitude Take to the Streets". Intersex Society of North America. October 1996.
  6. Driver, Betsy (14 October 2015). "The origins of Intersex Awareness Day". Intersex Day. Retrieved 2015-10-24.
  7. "The 14 days of intersex". Star Observer. Retrieved 11 October 2012.
  8. 1 2 "Argentinian Film XXY with guest speaker Morgan Holmes". Rainbow Health Ontario. 2013.
  9. Dr. Morgan Holmes, Laurier Faculty of Arts
  10. Teixeira, Robert (October 25, 2009). "Book review: Intersex by Morgan Holmes". Daily Xtra.
  11. Connell, Raewyn (March 2011). "Critical Intersex, review". Contemporary Sociology. 40 (2): 194–195. doi:10.1177/0094306110396847dd. Retrieved 2014-12-27.
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