{"id":611,"date":"2016-05-25T17:07:56","date_gmt":"2016-05-25T17:07:56","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/lewiscar.sites.grinnell.edu\/HistoryofMedicine\/?p=611"},"modified":"2016-05-25T17:07:56","modified_gmt":"2016-05-25T17:07:56","slug":"intolerable-lesbian-lovers-medicines-control-of-deviant-sexuality-and-gender-norms","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/lewiscar.sites.grinnell.edu\/HistoryofMedicine\/uncategorized\/intolerable-lesbian-lovers-medicines-control-of-deviant-sexuality-and-gender-norms\/","title":{"rendered":"&#8220;Intolerable Lesbian Lovers:&#8221; Medicine&#8217;s Control of Deviant Sexuality and Gender Norms"},"content":{"rendered":"<blockquote><p>Hannah Boggess is a [2018] Gender, Women&#8217;s, and Sexuality Studies and History double major. Outside of schoolwork, she enjoys playing with every dog she sees, watching\u00a0<em>The West Wing<\/em>, and being a feminist killjoy.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p><span style=\"color: #0000ff;\"><a style=\"color: #0000ff;\" href=\"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3173834?seq=1#page_scan_tab_contents\" target=\"_blank\">Compulsory heterosexuality<\/a><\/span>,\u00a0a term popularized by Adrienne Rich in the 1980s, is the overwhelming, hegemonic, enforced belief that all people are assumed\u2014and required\u2014to be heterosexual. It is enforced largely by patriarchal power structures but can be seen in many ways: through advertising, mass media, microaggressions, pop culture, and\u00a0general cultural understandings. Consequently, anyone who diverts from heterosexuality (especially women) are seen as a threat to the established hierarchy of gender. This can be seen throughout history as well as today\u2014think about the ways in which women are \u201c<span style=\"color: #0000ff;\"><a style=\"color: #0000ff;\" href=\"http:\/\/www.huffingtonpost.com\/leora-tanenbaum\/the-truth-about-slut-shaming_b_7054162.html\" target=\"_blank\">slut shamed<\/a><\/span>\u201d for asserting their sexuality or the assumption that a lesbian woman simply \u201c<span style=\"color: #0000ff;\"><a style=\"color: #0000ff;\" href=\"https:\/\/www.google.com\/#q=how+to+get+a+lesbian+to+fall+in+love+with+a+man\" target=\"_blank\">hasn\u2019t met the right man yet<\/a><\/span>.\u201d\u00a0Though today, heterosexuality is enforced primarily through cultural norms,\u00a0historically, the medical community was in charge of regulating gender norms and women\u2019s sexuality. The medical community used its scientific authority in the first half of the 20<sup>th<\/sup> century to prescribe heterosexuality as a way to control gender relations; doctors specifically identified lesbian women as a threat to <span style=\"color: #0000ff;\"><a style=\"color: #0000ff;\" href=\"https:\/\/en.wikipedia.org\/wiki\/Cisgender\" target=\"_blank\">cisgender<\/a><\/span>, heterosexual norms and consequently attempted to control their sexuality.<\/p>\n<p>Even before sexuality explicitly became a part of medicine, it was still regulated and researched. In the late 1800&#8217;s, women\u2019s sexualities were subject to taxonomies and definitions through advice manuals circulated by doctors. These articles and the beliefs they purported created a medical context for relationships and defined &#8220;normal&#8221;\u00a0marital health and sexual desire. (In this context, &#8220;normal&#8221; meant cisgender, heterosexual, submissive, compliant, stay-at-home wife and mother.) Their recommendations included normal social relationships with a potential to turn deviant; for example, the articles encouraged female friendships, but not \u201cpolluted\u201d friends who would engage in sexual activities together. [1] Women could have \u201cromantic friends\u201d with whom they were intimate in private,\u00a0they could be eccentric but pass for cisgender and heterosexual, but they could not be what one advice manual called \u201cintolerable lesbian lovers.\u201d [2] The doctors\u00a0also identified threats: an unmarried woman, a professional woman, or a woman who chose another woman as her sexual or romantic partner. These recommendations can be understood as a way to control gender relations. In the late 1800<b>&#8216;<\/b>s, the feminist movement was beginning to gain ground, and people were seeing a \u201cnew woman\u201d\u2014one who had ambitions outside of being a heterosexual wife and mother. This threatened every social norm\u2014economic, cultural, political\u2014in a way that necessitated a response from the white, heterosexual, cisgender men in power. In order to remind women how they were meant to act, medical professionals began to take on the cultural work of regulating gender norms. In pathologizing lesbian women, doctors consequently created a dichotomy between the \u201cnormal\u201d and \u201cdeviant\u201d population, therefore encouraging and requiring everyone to fall under the \u201cnormal\u201d category.<\/p>\n<p>In the 1880&#8217;s, sexual inversion became a common term to describe homosexual people. A person could \u201cinvert\u201d their gender identity and consequently choose sexual partners of the same gender. [3] In 1907, with the coining of \u201csexology,\u201d one\u2019s sexual life became fair game for doctors to analyze and pathologize. [4] Sexology\u2019s primary interest was to categorize and catalog the known variety of sexual desires and behaviors. Initially, this included various kinds of treatments\u2014specifically, hormone therapy was popular in the early 1900&#8217;s, which was when a doctor would inject a lesbian woman with estrogen, the female sex hormone, in order to reverse their sexual \u201cinversion.\u201d [5] The conflation of sexuality and gender is evident here: doctors believed that in shifting a lesbian woman\u2019s gender further to the side of femininity, they could counteract her deviant sexual desires. However, when this therapy was shown time and time again to do nothing in encouraging a lesbian woman to \u201cbecome\u201d heterosexual, doctors turned to new methods.<\/p>\n<p>In the early 1900&#8217;s, medical opinions and practices towards lesbian women were a means of establishing control and regulating gender roles. For example, the medical journal <em>American Medicine <\/em>wrote that someone could identify a lesbian if she only had an orgasm while on top during sex, cut her hair, had a masculinity complex, and wore jackets. [6] These traits are obviously completely separate from one\u2019s sexuality, but doctors\u2019 prescription of norms to all behavior (sexuality, gender performance, and lifestyle choices) was how they understood lesbianism at this time. Being a lesbian\u00a0was something that was assumed to be evident in all aspects of life.<\/p>\n<p>Doctors explicitly connected being a lesbian to a number of lifestyles and identities, specifically, masturbation, nymphomania, feeling superior to men, and being a suffragist. Female masturbation was a significant fear among doctors; it was widely considered sexual filth and the first step towards homosexuality. Echoing the advice manuals of the 1850&#8217;s, medical journals warned against female masturbation because girls would be coerced into mutual masturbation with older women, who were nymphomaniacs, and they would then be compelled into homosexuality. [7] Doctors claimed that only female masturbators were leaders of social justice movements such as suffrage, spinsters, and misandrists. An article in <em>American Medicine <\/em>in 1916 claimed that suffragettes were repressed homosexuals because \u201crarely, if ever, do women whose libido is satisfied take any interest in the suffragist movement.\u201d [8]<\/p>\n<p>In creating this dichotomy between normalcy (heterosexual, sexually satisfied, passive, politically uninvolved woman) and obscenity (lesbian, nymphomaniac, angry, jealous, suffragette), doctors further isolated and pathologized lesbian women. The American public, and specifically white heterosexual men, feared so deeply that women were becoming sexually independent and politically active that they condemned homosexuality as a means to resist change in the gender hierarchy. Sexology, especially the study of lesbian women, was \u201cabout constructing a model of sexuality which purported to be objective and scientific but in fact promoted the interests of men in a sexually <em>[read gender]<b>\u00a0<\/b><\/em>divided society.\u201d [9] Medical professionals attempted (and perhaps succeeded) in claiming control over lesbian women under the guise of science, but their ultimate goal was to preserve heterosexuality, which also preserved and encouraged other systems of white male power, such as the patriarchy and capitalism.<\/p>\n<p>Later, in the 1930&#8217;s and 40&#8217;s, medical opinion was focused on how to find homosexuals, and they searched for a common trait through a battery of tests and scales that were ultimately about gender performance, not sexual behavior. [10] Doctors emphasized the importance of physical appearance and body type in identifying lesbian women, pointing to factors\u00a0as inconsequential as lesbian women&#8217;s age of first menstrual cycle, body proportions, and pitch of voice.\u00a0[11] The <em>American Journal of Psychiatry<\/em> published an article in 1935 that decisively claimed that \u201cthe lesbian\u201d is characterized by firm muscle, excessive hair on her back and chest, a masculine distribution of pubic hair, a small uterus, and an over- or under-developed labia and clitoris. [12] Again, similarly to their earlier fixations on lifestyle and habits, doctors identified irrelevant physical characteristics in an attempt to find a root cause for homosexuality and therefore justification for its pathologization.<\/p>\n<p>One example of the extremes to which doctors went to identify the reason for lesbian women\u2019s existence is seen in the 1930&#8217;s study on lesbian women\u2019s physiological attributes. This research project, funded by <span style=\"color: #000080;\"><a style=\"color: #000080;\" href=\"http:\/\/gayhistory.wikidot.com\/helen-reitman\">Helen Reitman<\/a><\/span> and the Committee for the Study of Sex Variants, enlisted psychiatrists, gynecologists, obstetricians, pathologists, radiologists, neurologists, clinical psychologists, endocrinologists, and a host of other medical professionals to look at \u201csex variants\u201d and subsequently diagnose their homosexuality. [13] Lesbianism was seen as a problem for medicine to solve for the good of society, and so these doctors took it upon themselves to learn about the physical makeup of the homosexual. The research was explicit in its aims: it was not for the purpose of knowledge, rather, it was \u201cto assist doctors in identifying and treating\u201d gay patients. [14] Doctors also wanted to keep homosexuality from \u201cspreading&#8221;\u00a0through\u00a0the general population, and as such, they \u201chad the duty and capacity to play a crucial role in ensuring the mental (and moral) health of the community.\u201d [15] The final results of the research included a family tree, psychiatric evaluation, first person narrative about one\u2019s personal history, gynecological examination results, assessment of skull, chest, and pelvic x-rays, a rating of femininity on a 1-10 scale, and a Freudian psychoanalytic review. [16]<\/p>\n<p>Despite this barrage of tests, doctors were unable to understand certain factors about lesbians\u2014essentially, why they didn\u2019t all act and look the same. Prior to this study, doctors assumed that lesbians had inverted their proper gender role, and their sexual desire for women was a consequence of their masculine traits. As the study went on, however, certain findings (i.e. feminine lesbians, sexual passivity of masculine women) were confounding to the doctors, and they used elaborate searches to prove the origin of homosexuality in these women. [17] In their search for a source, male doctors asserted their ability to understand and diagnose sexuality and apply that diagnosis to women\u2019s lived. However, the research they did\u2014though it may have been rooted in problematic beliefs\u2014was novel in that the lesbian women were actually speaking for themselves. In allowing for self-representation, the doctors were faced with factors that complicated their understandings of gender representation and sexuality.<\/p>\n<p>In the first half of the twentieth century, doctors used a variety of methods\u2014linking lesbianism and deviant social practices, performing tests on lesbian women, and identifying irrelevant physical characteristics\u2014in an effort to \u201cprove\u201d who was a lesbian. However, these diagnoses and treatments were simply a way for (male, heterosexual) doctors to establish their authority over (lesbian, female) patients, and largely, for the cisgender, heterosexual, capitalist patriarchy to assert their control over those who threatened their power. Doctors\u2019 efforts to control lesbianism were ultimately about the regulating of gender norms and power structures, not deviant sexuality.<\/p>\n<p>Notes:<\/p>\n<p>[1] Marylynne Diggs, \u201cRomantic Friends or a Different Race of Creatures? The Representation of Lesbian Pathology in Nineteenth-Century America\u201d <em>Feminist Studies <\/em>21, no. 2 (1995): 325.<\/p>\n<p>[2] Ibid, 323.<\/p>\n<p>[3] Ibid, 330.<\/p>\n<p>[4] Celia Roberts, \u201cMedicine and the Making of a Sexual Body\u201d in <em>Handbook of the New Sexuality Studies <\/em>ed. Nancy Fisher, Chet Meeks, and Steven Seidman (New York, NY: Routledge, 2006): 90.<\/p>\n<p>[5] Ibid, 90.<\/p>\n<p>[6] Karin Martin, \u201cGender and Sexuality: A Medical Opinion on Homosexuality, 1900-1950\u201d <em>Gender and Society<\/em> 7, no. 3 (1993): 251.<\/p>\n<p>[7] Ibid, 259.<\/p>\n<p>[8] Ibid, 250.<\/p>\n<p>[9] Ibid, 251.<\/p>\n<p>[10] Ibid, 248.<\/p>\n<p>[11] Ibid, 253.<\/p>\n<p>[12] Ibid, 253.<\/p>\n<p>[13] Jennifer Terry, \u201cLesbians Under the Medical Gaze: Scientists Search for Remarkable Differences\u201d <em>The Journal of Sex Research <\/em>27, no. 3 (1990): 318.<\/p>\n<p>[14] Ibid, 318.<\/p>\n<p>[15] Ibid, 319.<\/p>\n<p>[16] Ibid, 323.<\/p>\n<p>[17] Ibid, 321.<\/p>\n<p>For Further Reading:<\/p>\n<p>Jennifer Terry, \u201cLesbians Under the Medical Gaze: Scientists Search for Remarkable Differences\u201d <em>The Journal of Sex Research <\/em>27, no. 3 (1990): 317-339.<\/p>\n<p>Karin Martin, \u201cGender and Sexuality: A Medical Opinion on Homosexuality, 1900-1950\u201d <em>Gender and Society<\/em> 7, no. 3 (1993): 246-260.<\/p>\n<p>Celia Roberts, \u201cMedicine and the Making of a Sexual Body\u201d in <em>Handbook of the New Sexuality Studies <\/em>ed. Nancy Fisher, Chet Meeks, and Steven Seidman (New York, NY: Routledge, 2006): 88-97.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Hannah Boggess is a [2018] Gender, Women&#8217;s, and Sexuality Studies and History double major. Outside of schoolwork, she enjoys playing with every dog she sees, watching\u00a0The West Wing, and being a feminist killjoy. Compulsory heterosexuality,\u00a0a term popularized by Adrienne Rich in the 1980s, is the overwhelming, hegemonic, enforced belief that all people are assumed\u2014and required\u2014to&hellip; <span class=\"kuorinka-read-more\"><a href=\"https:\/\/lewiscar.sites.grinnell.edu\/HistoryofMedicine\/uncategorized\/intolerable-lesbian-lovers-medicines-control-of-deviant-sexuality-and-gender-norms\/\" class=\"more-link\">Read more <span class=\"screen-reader-text\">&#8220;Intolerable Lesbian Lovers:&#8221; Medicine&#8217;s Control of Deviant Sexuality and Gender Norms<\/span><\/a><\/span><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":8,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[1],"tags":[74,15,30,37,16,46,9],"class_list":{"0":"post-611","1":"post","2":"type-post","3":"status-publish","4":"format-standard","6":"category-uncategorized","7":"tag-body-ideals","8":"tag-ethics","9":"tag-gender","10":"tag-medical-authority","11":"tag-medical-research","12":"tag-psychiatry","13":"tag-sexuality","14":"entry"},"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/lewiscar.sites.grinnell.edu\/HistoryofMedicine\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/611","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/lewiscar.sites.grinnell.edu\/HistoryofMedicine\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/lewiscar.sites.grinnell.edu\/HistoryofMedicine\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/lewiscar.sites.grinnell.edu\/HistoryofMedicine\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/8"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/lewiscar.sites.grinnell.edu\/HistoryofMedicine\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=611"}],"version-history":[{"count":6,"href":"https:\/\/lewiscar.sites.grinnell.edu\/HistoryofMedicine\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/611\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":889,"href":"https:\/\/lewiscar.sites.grinnell.edu\/HistoryofMedicine\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/611\/revisions\/889"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/lewiscar.sites.grinnell.edu\/HistoryofMedicine\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=611"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/lewiscar.sites.grinnell.edu\/HistoryofMedicine\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=611"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/lewiscar.sites.grinnell.edu\/HistoryofMedicine\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=611"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}