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What is it that makes a person a boy or a girl? From our cradles to our graves, a pair of letters, either XX or XY, will define much of our lives. It’s a girl! or It’s a boy! will be the first label applied to us, the first thing said about who we are as an individual. For every person in every society, gender has a fundamental affect on what we choose, how we live, and how we think about the world and how the world sees us. Sex is one of the most powerfully defining concepts that we have.
Of course, we assume that we know what this gender thing is: boys are boys, girls are girls. Sex is fixed, biologically determined, simple. But what if it isn’t?
As Jane McCredie moves from laboratories to cafe tables, trying to find out exactly what sex is, the picture becomes much more complicated. Evolutionary psychologists, trans-gendered people, children playing with trucks and dolls, hormone specialists - they all have different stories to tell about what makes us girls and boys. These stories force us to stop and ask, ‘is it really so straightforward?’ Are we all really just stamped out in blue and pink?
Leading us on a remarkable exploration of the ground where biology and culture meet, intertwine and ultimately blur, this book examines the new science which is helping us answer these important questions. Showing that we are far from opposite sexes, Making Girls and Boys will challenge everything you thought you knew about men and women.
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What is it that makes a person a boy or a girl? From our cradles to our graves, a pair of letters, either XX or XY, will define much of our lives. It’s a girl! or It’s a boy! will be the first label applied to us, the first thing said about who we are as an individual. For every person in every society, gender has a fundamental affect on what we choose, how we live, and how we think about the world and how the world sees us. Sex is one of the most powerfully defining concepts that we have.
Of course, we assume that we know what this gender thing is: boys are boys, girls are girls. Sex is fixed, biologically determined, simple. But what if it isn’t?
As Jane McCredie moves from laboratories to cafe tables, trying to find out exactly what sex is, the picture becomes much more complicated. Evolutionary psychologists, trans-gendered people, children playing with trucks and dolls, hormone specialists - they all have different stories to tell about what makes us girls and boys. These stories force us to stop and ask, ‘is it really so straightforward?’ Are we all really just stamped out in blue and pink?
Leading us on a remarkable exploration of the ground where biology and culture meet, intertwine and ultimately blur, this book examines the new science which is helping us answer these important questions. Showing that we are far from opposite sexes, Making Girls and Boys will challenge everything you thought you knew about men and women.
When journalist and science writer Jane McCredie was in primary school there was a white line painted down the middle of the playground, sharply dividing the boys from the girls. In Making Girls and Boys, McCredie sets out to blur that line, offering a fascinating critique of one of our most fundamental social concepts: the idea that male and female are separate, clearly defined categories.
From the international furore that surrounded the question of South African athlete Caster Semenya’s sex, to the multitude of subtle intersex conditions that could affect as many as two per cent of all newborns, Making Girls and Boys presents us with an array of intriguing case studies that confound our simple understanding of what it is to be male and female. Perhaps more importantly, McCredie cuts through the tabloid noise that often surrounds this topic, writing of her subjects with insight, compassion and empathy.
From conception to puberty and beyond, McCredie examines the biological and environmental forces that go toward determining an individual’s sex and gender, revealing the true malleability and fragility of maleness and femaleness. Along the way she takes a fresh look at the illusive relationship between nature and nurture, and brilliantly debunks the work of evolutionary biologists who claim that the hunting and gathering ways of our distant ancestors have left modern men and women with brains that are hardwired differently.
Making Girls and Boys may overturn many of your most fundamental assumptions, but it is also an optimistic book, highlighting the incredible richness of our experience of sex and gender. It’s a welcome tonic in a world where we continue to be peddled so many constraining myths about what it is to be a man or a woman, and the white line that divides the boys and the girls still remains so stark.
Monica Dux is the co-author of **.