The Five Sexes: Why Male and Female Are Not Enough
Author(s) -
Anne FaustoSterling,
Žarko Trajanoski
Publication year - 2004
Publication title -
identities journal for politics gender and culture
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 1857-8616
DOI - 10.51151/identities.v3i1.118
Subject(s) - macedonian , citation , politics , gender studies , sociology , history , political science , ancient history , law
In 1843 Levi Suydam, a twenty-three-year-old resident of Salisbury, Connecticut, asked the town board of selectmen to validate his right to vote as a Whig in a hotly contested local election. The request raised a flurry of objections from the opposition party, for reasons that must be rare in the annals of American democracy: it was said that Suydam was more female than male and thus (some eighty years before suffrage was extended to women) could not be allowed to cast a ballot. To settle the dispute a physician, one William James Barry, was brought in to examine Suydam. And, presumably upon encountering a phallus, the good doctor declared the prospective voter male. With Suydam safely in their column the Whigs won the election by a majority of one.
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