The salacious sports media and the puritanical zealots that run international track and field have joined forces to hit a new low. Someone in the International Association of Athletics Federations (IAAF) leaked to the press that Caster Semenya, the 18-year-old 800-meter track champion from South Africa, is, in the words of Oren Yaniv in the New York Daily News, both "a woman... and a man!"
After being subjected to a battery of "gender tests," which included invasive exams by a gynecologist, an endocrinologist and a psychologist, Semenya's private business is now presented for public consumption.
If the leaks are to be regarded as true, they show that Caster Semenya has internal testes and no womb or ovaries. She is possibly one of the millions of people in the world (one of 1,666 births in the United States alone) who are classified as "intersex."
Or she may have Androgen Insensitivity Syndrome (AIS), which affects two to five out of every 100,000 births. The different biological gender classifications are complex, ever changing and, ideally, private. But to the drooling press, it's vulture time.
As Yaniv wrote, "The tests, ordered...after Semenya's 800-meter victory in the World Championships, determined she's a hermaphrodite--having both male and female organs." Now the story has gone international, and Caster Semenya has gone into hiding.
Forget for a moment that the term "hermaphrodite" is as outdated and offensive as "mulatto." Forget that these test results were leaked first to the Australian press, which also referred to Semenya as a hermaphrodite. Forget that Australia was the country that brought these accusations against Semenya in the first place.
Besides being a cruel and idiotic practice, sex testing doesn't account for the idea that gender is at least in part socially constructed and far more fluid than the iron categories of male and female. An 18-year-old woman is being torn apart in the press for doing nothing but winning a race. If it is the goal of the media and IAAF to destroy the life of a young, talented female athlete by outing her as potentially intersex then they are not simply pitiless; they are socially repugnant.
From the notion that women are somehow weaker and slower than men, to the not-so-subtle racism of Western standards of appearance, and on to their profound ignorance about the fluidity of sex and gender, these institutions are threatening to catapult women in sports back into the Dark Ages. We can't let them.
Being a woman--or a man--is not reducible to internal organs or chromosomes. Social, historical, political and economic forces shape who we are and how we perceive our gender identities, in addition to our biology.
We should be enraged by the indifference and crass opportunism at "sexy" headlines. We must demand an end to gender testing in sports as an ill-conceived endeavor that only results in tormenting its subjects and projecting garbage ideas about what men and women really are.
And after all the horror, outrage and ogling from the Daily News and its media brethren, Semenya's condition may very well be allowable under IAAF policy.
As Science of Sport reported, "While it may be suggested that being an intersex individual, or someone who is 'not entirely female,' is grounds for disqualification, it is not. In Atlanta in 1996, eight women 'failed' the sex verification test because they had a Y-chromosome (strictly speaking, they had the SRY gene or the Y-chromosome). All eight were allowed to compete."
Since 2005 eight athletes that we know about have been investigated for "sexuality issues." Of the eight, according to the IAAF secretary general, only four "were asked to stop their career."
Dr. Myron Genel, a professor emeritus of pediatrics at Yale University who was part of a special panel of experts the IAAF convened, said, "She's born a female, raised as a female through puberty. Whatever is found, with the exception of deliberate substance abuse, she's going to have to be allowed to compete as a female."
If Semenya's biology is not "normal," it's worth asking, what world-class athlete does have a normal body?
No one brands Shaquille O'Neal abnormal because he is seven feet tall. Michael Phelps, as was remarked by breathless Olympics commentators, has unusually large and flat feet that act like flippers in a pool. Usain Bolt has a stride that allows him to cover an insane amount of ground in only a few steps.
As Tommy Craggs of Deadspin writes, "Great athletes tend not to come from the vast middle of human life. They're all freaks in one way or another.... But Semenya has nevertheless been portrayed as some lone oddity on the margins, like some Elephant Man of sports, with everyone obsessing like Victorian scientists over the presence of a couple internal testicles. It's funny: People seem to think her very weirdness is grounds enough for stripping her of her medal and drumming her out of track. But this is sports. Her weirdness is perfectly normal."
It's the "her" part that gets Semenya in trouble. Exceptional male athletes are treated like kings, not sideshow freaks. But for women to join them on the royal dais, you must appear as if you can step seamlessly from the court or track and into the pages of soft-core porn. Freaks need not apply.
There are real fears, expressed by Semenya's family, for her mental health in the wake of this maelstrom. We should stand without question in solidarity with Caster Semenya and express nothing but contempt for those who would get off, financially or otherwise, on seeing her destroyed.
[Dave Zirin is The Nation's sports editor. He is the author A People's History of Sports in the United States (The New Press). His writing has appeared in the Los Angeles Times, Sports Illustrated.com and The Progressive. He is the host of Sirius/XM's Edge of Sports Radio.]
i think it's especially profound to point out that when steffi graff DOMINATED women's tennis for nearly 7 years not so long ago, you never heard a single question about her sex or gender!!! no one said she had an "unfair" advantage. this is so racists and hateful. caster is an incredibly beautiful and exceptional woman. we have nothing but love for you, caster!
"From the notion that women are somehow weaker and slower than men" Sorry to disappoint Dave but at the elite athletic levels and on average women ARE weaker and slower than men. Women simply cannot compete in athletic competition with men in events such as the 800m dash. So to allow women a place in which to compete you must segregate between men and women, and to do this you must draw a line between women and men. This can be an uncomfortable thing to do, especially in the rare that sex is not such a black and white issue. In these cases you must err on the side of exclusion, that is excluding ambiguous cases from female competition and allowing them to compete with what is essentially the default open competition (male).
JJ - your idea is not repellent. And trans people have always - I am almost positive - had a place in the Gay Games The problem is that many people don't know they are intersex until they are put under the microscope. Also: it's not just intersex, it's AIS and a lot of other gender variant existences. But we don't call Shaw "height variant." We don't call Albert Haynesworth "huge variant." As long as testosterone isn't being administered artificially, you should be allowed to run as - pardon the expression - God made you.
@ jj....
B/c one who is intersex or "homo" sexual has not ever dated someone of the "opposite" gender...
illogic is a disease on these intrawebz.
I think we should start gender testing for horse jockeys. Normal men shouldn't be that small.
People who think Semenya has an unfair advantage because of her biology need to take a look at the record book.
Although she crushed the competition at the world championship, she didn't set a world record and, in fact, her time wasn't even in the top ten times in the history of the sport. It's well within the realm of possibility that "real women" can beat her.
There is absolutely no reason to exclude her other than fear and prejudice. The fact that she is not tearing the record books apart (unlike Usain Bolt) should stand as proof that she has no advantage over the other competitors.
She has abnormally high levels of testosterone for a woman. That's illegal. Even men with abnormally high levels are deemed "illegal". This isn't rocket science.
PK, abnormally high levels aren't illegal if a person's body is unable to use testosterone the way most people's bodies are. Women with Androgen Insensitivity Syndrome, for example, produce far more testosterone than the average woman, but their bodies aren't able to use much of it. Often, they are less able to use testosterone than the typical woman. The IAAF has allowed many women with this condition to compete as women.
I don't know much about this gender thing so I'm reluctant to comment, but some things just puzzle me:
Is it just me or does anybody else find it interesting that Caster's gender wasn't questioned until AFTER she won?
If "intersex people" are physically superior to women, why aren't more of them dominating women's sports? If they are and we just don't know it, why was Caster singled out? Either way this issue seems motivated more by "fear and prejudice" towards Ms. Semenya than concerns about defining gender.
For me the bigger issue is the abuse suffered by Ms. Semenya at the hands of those who pretend to be concerned about protecting women's athletics. Kudos to Dave Z for once again hitting the nail on the head and placing concern for humanity, sensitivity, and civility at the forefront of the discussion. Though her black skin and "unfeminine" appearance may make some people insensitive to her humanity, this is a young woman who deserves to be respected.
Kevin,
So having an unfair advantage is only an issue if you're the best in your sport. Ever? That's ridiculous.
Why not let Rafael Palmeiro into the hall of fame when eligible. He cheated and had an unfair advantage. But it's well within the realm of possibility that "real baseball players" were better than him.
There is absolutely no reason to exclude him other than fear and prejudice
See how ridiculous that sounds?
I wait with anticipation David's stinging critique of the actions of South Africa's athletic's and political leaders.
Spencer, thats not what I was saying. I was making a point that her condition does not necessarily equate to an advantage on the field and this is evidenced by the times that she runs.
Comparing her to Rafael Palmeiro is disingenuous. He put a banned substance into his body, Caster did nothing of the sort.
I think you would agree that she isn't cheating - So why ban her if other women can beat her?
Very interesting and amusing subject. I read with great pleasure.
To disagree with Spencer, women are not inferior to men in sport. Women generally do better then men in flexibility and agility. It is a social fallacy that creates that image for people like you.
Secondly you cite Rafael palmeiro when he faces the same racial stereotype that Semenya does.He will have a hard time reaching the hall of fame because hes latino, and people like Maguire will have little difficulty getting to the hall. so when you are trying to promote your ideologies, step back and evaluate what your saying.
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Dave Zirin is the author of the book: "Welcome to the Terrordome: The Pain, Politics and Promise of Sports" (Haymarket). You can receive his column Edge of Sports, every week by going to dave@edgeofsports.com.
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