Uncertain Knowledge: The Medicalisation of Intersex People and the Production of Ignorance
Abstract
:1. Introduction
‘Knowledge is possible only through the systematic “social construction of ignorance”’.
2. Materials and Methods
3. Intersex People and the Mechanisms of Ignorance Production
‘If we are to fully understand the complex practices of knowledge production and the variety of features that account for why something is known, we must also understand the practices that account for not knowing, that is, for our lack of knowledge about a phenomenon’.
- Cultural erasureFirst, on a general level, ignorance is produced by removing the existence of intersex variations from the collective awareness and by allowing the biomedical sphere to monopolise it. Many social actors participate in this process, mainly state institutions, cultural content producers, medical staff and education professionals. Modern Western culture has established, deep in our perceptions, a sense of obviousness of sex binarism that intersex or other bodies that do not conform to norms risk destabilising (King 2016; Laqueur 1990).Throughout history, ‘hermaphrodites’,5 as a scientific category, have been positioned between visibility and invisibility, depending on the cultural context and power relations in place. In modern history (Daston and Park 1995), considerable scientific resources have been invested in the search for the ‘true sex’ (Foucault 1980).6 For example, at the end of the 19th and beginning of the 20th centuries, intersex people were publicly exposed, exoticised and dehumanised in the West during Circus shows (De Herder 2020). With the arrival of modern science (starting from the 16th century), intersex bodies, especially the genitals, have often been published in medical books and were super-visible in a dehumanising way. As Amato put it: ‘Ironically, it is this heightened visibility of intersex bodies that entails their invisibilisation’ (Amato 2016, p. 49).During most of the 20th century, intersex people were progressively invisiblised and confined almost exclusively to the medical sphere as ‘syndromes’ of ‘sexual ambiguity’. Consequently, they were absent from popular culture, arts and school curricula (King 2016; Sterling 2021) and were excluded from collective activities such as Olympic sports (Bohuon 2015). This had severe consequences on intersex lives. The title of an article written by Sarita Vincent Guillot, a French intersex activist, illustrates this reality: ‘Intersex: not having the right to say what no one told us we were’ (Guillot 2008, p. 37, author’s translation). A change occurred at the beginning of the 21st century with the development of ‘intersex intelligibility in the cultural imaginary’ (Amato 2016, p. 22). This led to intersex people appearing increasingly more often in books, movies and television, as well as in some educational programs. This fundamental shift was made possible by the creation of movements who fought for intersex people to be socially recognised, not as rhetorical or symbolic figures, but as embodied human beings fighting for their rights. This increasing visibility has been slower to develop in France than in anglophone countries (Raz 2023).
- 2.
- Epistemological erasureThe second type of social erasure is epistemological, that is to say, the scientific production of ignorance, whereby access to information and data such as personal files (solicited by individuals) or medical archives (solicited by scholars) is restricted or partial. Many physicians interpreted Johns Hopkins’ biomedical protocol as a recommendation to conceal information from concerned people and sometimes also from their parents (Meoded-Danon and Yanay 2016). In practice, this involved advising parents to hide all details about a child’s intersex variation in order to prevent any potential ‘doubt’ children might have about their sex and gender (Karkazis 2008). This mechanism legitimises ignorance by promoting it as something for one’s own good (Funkenstein and Steinsaltz 1987). However, frequent silence and/or secrecy surrounding their bodies and medical history has negative repercussions on intersex people (Monro et al. 2024). Access to personal files is denied or restricted for many intersex people. Other obstacles to acquiring their own personal files include the financial cost and long waiting periods (Holmes 1994). Many are told that archive files have disappeared, been destroyed or lost. Sometimes, retrieved files are partial; for example, information is missing about medical interventions performed on them when they were young7. Some of these old practices, such as diffusing false information or denying access to medical files, were challenged during the 2005 ‘Consensus Conference’ in Chicago, but they have not entirely stopped: individuals are still receiving partial and mainly pathologised information about their variation and past medical interventions. This production of a subjective ignorance of one’s own body and history hinders the capacity of intersex people to produce their own knowledge. The consequence is that certain information is denied, and medical knowledge is positioned as the only legitimate form of knowledge. The subjectivation process of recovering one’s ‘stolen word’ (parole volée, Guillot 2008, p. 47) implicates the need for intersex people to struggle against ‘epistemic injustice’ (Fricker 2007) of knowledge being withheld from them (Bastien-Charlebois 2017). As a result of this ‘wrong’ which is done to them, ‘specifically in their capacity as a knower’, they are prevented from ‘collective interpretive resources’, which would enable them to make sense of their own social experience (Fricker 2007, p. 1).Terminology issues are indeed very important. While many doctors present the current medical paradigm, which uses the DSD8 nomenclature as neutral, intersex scholars argue that, on the contrary, it contributes to the stigmatisation and the erasure of intersex variations using a strategy of divide and rule (Davis 2015; Lundberg 2017; Aegerter 2022). More specifically, they believe that it concentrates on biomedical issues, such as diagnosis and genetics, so as to exclude an increasingly larger number of variations from the umbrella category of intersex (e.g., hypospadias, Turner or Klinefelter syndromes, and even CAH).Up to the present day in France, only authorised medical staff have access to data such as the number of intersex (or DSD) ‘patients’, the number and types of surgeries conducted or hormonal ‘treatments’ initiated and the age of the intersex person at the time of these interventions. These are the same people who promote the protocol itself. Indeed, a French Senate report indicated that even the Minister of Health admitted to having no data on the interventions and management of intersex variations (Blondin and Bouchoux 2017). This is still the case, though a report with data on the number of operations is to be published soon as directed by a law passed in 2021. The obstacles that non-medical scholars face in trying to access medical archives and data in France hinder the possibility for anyone other than medical practitioners to conduct intersex research. Since doctors and psycho-medical employees in hospitals are the only persons with access to these data, they are both the judge and jury—evaluating their own practices (Raz 2016). The inaccessibility to medical data, even for ‘patients’ themselves (and therefore persons for whom doctor–patient confidentiality does not apply), not only produces ignorance at the individual and collective levels but also difficulties in developing intersex studies in France.
- 3.
- Physical erasureThe third type of erasure in the context of intersex people is physical obliteration. Embodied and concrete, it uses physical modifications to ‘repair’ or ‘normalise’ intersex bodies. It is related to a more general tendency to necropolitics (Mbembé 2003), whereby intersex lives are considered unworthy, attested to by degraded mental health, suicide attempts (Rosenwohl-Mack et al. 2020) and infanticide (Carpenter 2020; Behrens 2020), practices we may qualify as eugenic. Here, we especially think about voluntary interruptions of pregnancy that take place in different countries. That is attested by several scholars (Hashiloni-Dolev 2006; Jeon et al. 2012), open European data (Eurocat, European surveillance of congenital anomalies) and my own research in Israel (Raz 2015) and France (Raz 2019), where several doctors said they try to avoid these selective abortions but that they do occur in some centres. In the West, physical modifications to intersex persons, often without their consent, are widespread and commonplace. They consist of biomedical interventions which aim to erase any gap between social and medical norms. They include invasive non-reversible surgical operations (e.g., gonadectomies, vaginal creation or extension, cosmetic alteration of penile appearance, clitoris reduction or ablation, mastectomies), post-operation acts such as vaginal dilatations and hormonal prescriptions (in order to enlarge the penis, reduce the clitoris or body hair, replace physiological hormones that were stopped by gonad ablations, etc.) and laser epilation prescriptions. Some of these practices have evolved over time. Gonadectomies, for example, are not systematically conducted during a child’s first years of life, but no proof exists to this day that ‘normalisation’ interventions have stopped or diminished in France. Many of the debates surrounding intersex people concentrate on the physical mutilation of bodies already born; few mention other types of erasure of bodily variations in the prenatal phase, such as pregnancy interruptions of intersex foetuses and hormonal intervention aiming to prevent the ‘virilisation’ of the foetus. I will detail this particular practice in the next part of this paper.
4. Case Study: Uncertain Knowledge and the Controversy Surrounding Prenatal ‘Treatment’
4.1. The Erasure of CAH Girls: A Short History
4.2. The Birth of Prenatal DEX
“We gave a fairly large dose of hydrocortisone, and then we still did an amniocentesis at mid-gestation to measure 17OHP in the amniotic fluid to know if it worked. Well, the hormone was very high, so we said to ourselves that it’s not enough, so we increased the dose, and the child was born almost normal. She just had a clitoris a little bit big, but she’s never had surgery, she’s never had any problems, and things have always gone well in this family”10.
4.3. International Controversy: Sidelining Uncomfortable Knowledge
“The problem is that the Swedes, they had, I don’t know, 9, 10, 12 cases, while I had 50 or 60 antenatal diagnoses of hyperplasia with the treatment. I don’t know how many I have done, more than a hundred. […] And each time I have done a study after 5 years, 10 years, to review our patients, to review everything that we thought we had to follow. I’ve done that several times, eh, and I’ve always published our work on it. No, we didn’t find anything salient.”17
4.4. France and the Maintenance of a Policy of Ignorance
“This treatment is very controversial because the side effects can be serious […].” Dr. Pierre Mouriquand“These are the reasons why certain countries—Sweden or the United States—have abandoned these hormonal treatments.” Maryvonne BlondinWhat about in France?“We continue to prescribe them.”22 Dr. Pierre Mouriquand
4.5. Parents’ Experience and Medical (Dis)information
“I had water retention, I had a beard; most of it went away after giving birth. I wasn’t sleeping. I was a bundle of nerves; I vacuumed all the time. I wasn’t well. […] I asked if I could stop it or reduce [the ‘treatment’] and I was told no, and I had to continue for a month after the birth.”28
5. Discussion
6. Conclusions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A. Author’s Translation
“INFORMATION NOTE FOR COUPLES AT RISK Document from the Robert Debré hospital, read online on the Parisian hospitals’ network APHP website on 7 November 2023.
Appendix A.1. Principles of Treatment
Appendix A.2. Efficiency
Appendix A.3. Side Effects of Antenatal Treatment
Appendix A.4. Conclusions
1 | Author’s translation. Original expression: ‘les formes d’oubli et d’invisibilité’. |
2 | Intersex people, or individuals with sex development variations, present inborn sex characteristics that do not fit the social and medical norms of male/female binarism. The term intersex can also refer to individuals who have experienced medical and social invalidation of their bodies. |
3 | Some terms (treatment, normalisation, virilisation, atypical sex, ambiguous sex, etc.) are put into quotation marks since their use is a borrowed one: they are used in medical papers or discourse and suggest that intersex is a pathology. The quotation marks signify that the author does not endorse this approach. |
4 | CAH is related to variations in the production of hormones by the adrenal glands. It is a rare genetic condition with a recessive heredity mechanism. In people with XX chromosomes, it often creates intersex traits such as a bigger-than-average clitoris, labial fusion, and/or a vagina considered too small. |
5 | Intersex people were named «hermaphrodites» during many periods of history, mainly in medical publications, considering it as a monstrosity or a pathology. The use of this mythological term has been criticised by concerned people since the 1990s as stigmatising and should, therefore, be employed only for historical purposes. |
6 | In 1980, Michel Foucault wrote a text as a preface to the English edition of Abel/Herculin Barbin’s memoirs. In this text, he reminds the scientific context of medical perception of intersex people in the 19th century. The dominant approach, “age of gonads”, as it was called by Alice Dreger (1998), was to consider that doctors should determine the ‘true’ sex of intersex people by looking inside their bodies, and especially by examining their gonads during internal surgery. The idea of a gonadal sex as the ‘true sex’ did not completely disappear, but other components of sex were taken into account, maintaining, for many doctors, the illusion of a ‘true sex’ for each intersex person. |
7 | On this topic, see a recent press investigation about French intersex people and their struggle to obtain their medical files: Pepy, Lilas. Personnes intersexes: des mutilations tenues au secret. La Déferlante, May 2024. |
8 | The DSD nomenclature distinguishes intersex people into categories of ‘syndromes’ mostly following their sex chromosomes. |
9 | Interview with Charlotte, February 2014. All of the names given to interviewees are pseudonyms. |
10 | Interview with Dr. Dupuy, pediatric endocrinologist, May 2014. |
11 | It is said that ‘The voluntary interruption of a pregnancy may, at any time, be performed if two doctors attest, after examination and discussion, that the continuation of the pregnancy seriously endangers the woman’s health or that there is a strong probability that the unborn child will suffer from a particularly serious condition of particular gravity recognised as incurable at the time of diagnosis’ (L.162-12, law n°75-17 of 17 January 1975, art. 5). |
12 | Interview with Dr. Bonnet, pediatric surgeon, April 2014. |
13 | Interview with Dr. Rousseau, pediatric endocrinologist, March 2014. |
14 | See note 10 above. |
15 | DEX may be potentially given to any ’at risk’ pregnant persons who already had an affected child before knowing if the foetus is affected by CAH and before knowing its chromosomes. However, CAH is a recessive genetic condition, which means only 1 of 4 foetuses will actually be affected. Furthermore, since only XX chromosomes foetuses are targetted, they only represent half of the foetuses, which can be potentially treated (hence 1 of 8). |
16 | As early as 1995, a study suggested that these children were shyer and more sensitive than the control group (Trautman et al. 1995). |
17 | Interview with Dr. Dupuy, May 2014. |
18 | See note 17 above. |
19 | Recommendation no 6.27 from the Second Report ‘Involuntary or coerced sterilisation of intersex people in Australia’, 25 October 2013, Senate Standing Committees on Community Affairs, Commonwealth of Australia 2013. |
20 | Minutes of a meeting of the association Surrénales, June 2009. |
21 | These recommendations are available (in French) here: https://www.has-sante.fr/upload/docs/application/pdf/2011-05/ald_hors_liste_-_pnds_sur_lhyperplasie_congenitale_des_surrenales.pdf (consulted on 21 May 2024). |
22 | Dr. Pierre Mouriquand, head of a department in Lyon and coordinator of the Expertise national Centre of genital development (DEVGEN). Exerpt of his presentation in a Senate commission (Blondin and Bouchoux 2017, p. 23). |
23 | Interview with Dr. Rousseau, February 2014. |
24 | Interview with Dr. Guez, gynaecologist, January 2015. |
25 | Interview with Dr. Schapiro, geneticist, December 2014. |
26 | Information meeting of the association Surrénales. |
27 | National Protocol of Diagnosis and Care (PNDS) on Congenital Adrenal Hyperplasia, published in April 2011 by the High Authority of Health (HAS). |
28 | Interview with Annie, June 2014. |
29 | DES is a synthetic estrogen which has been prescribed to pregnant persons. Its use was called into question in 1953 because it was suspected of leading to vaginal and cervical cancer in girls exposed to it in utero. Following the protest movement, DES was contraindicated for pregnant persons in 1977. |
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Raz, M. Uncertain Knowledge: The Medicalisation of Intersex People and the Production of Ignorance. Soc. Sci. 2024, 13, 385. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci13080385
Raz M. Uncertain Knowledge: The Medicalisation of Intersex People and the Production of Ignorance. Social Sciences. 2024; 13(8):385. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci13080385
Chicago/Turabian StyleRaz, Michal. 2024. "Uncertain Knowledge: The Medicalisation of Intersex People and the Production of Ignorance" Social Sciences 13, no. 8: 385. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci13080385
APA StyleRaz, M. (2024). Uncertain Knowledge: The Medicalisation of Intersex People and the Production of Ignorance. Social Sciences, 13(8), 385. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci13080385