Stoller Ch13 - The Transsexual Experiment - Chapter 13 Transsexualism and Transvestitism
Stoller Ch13 - The Transsexual Experiment - Chapter 13 Transsexualism and Transvestitism
Stoller Ch13 - The Transsexual Experiment - Chapter 13 Transsexualism and Transvestitism
JASON ARONSON
New York
CONTENTS
Part II
TESTS
8. The Male Transsexual as ‘Experiment’ 117
9. Tests 126
10. The Pre-Natal Hormone Theory of Transsexualism 134
11. The Term‘Transvestism’ 142
12. Transsexualism and Homosexuality 159
13. * Transsexualism and Transvestism 170
14. Identical Twins 182
15. Two Male Transsexuals in One Family 187
16. The Thirteenth Case 193
17. Shaping 203
18. Etiological Factors in Female Transsexualism: A First Approximation 223
Part III
PROBLEMS
19 Male Transsexualism: Uneasiness 247
20 Follow-Up 257
21 Problems in Treatment 272
22 Conclusions: Masculinity in Males 281
References 298
Index 313
Part II
TESTS
13
TRANSSEXUALISM AND
TRANSVESTISM
170
TRANSSEXUALISM AND TRANSVESTISM 171
* This is meant to be a thought with pseudo-meaning, in part a gibe at those who in theorizing
talk about ‘the heterosexual’ as if that person had a distinct type of personality. There are in fact,
few if any, mechanisms at work in perverse, non-heterosexual people that cannot be found in
heterosexuals (cf. 2). The range of sexual practices is so heterogeneous in heterosexuals and the
meaning of sexual objects so variable that the term ‘the heterosexual’ is vague almost to the point of
saying nothing.
172 THE TRANSSEXUAL EXPERIMENT
While they envy women, they are not competitive with them. Transsexuals
never state that they can be a better woman than any other woman—they
would be happy just to be ordinary females, no more or less than the
women they have known.
If a transsexual’s life depended on it, she could not successfully imitate a
masculine man. All report that during their teens, when there were
powerful forces put on them to act more like a man, they could not do so,
and as a result their lives become desperate because of the humiliations
they must sustain for being too feminine. On the other hand, transvestites
have no difficulty in being masculine, not only when the situation requires,
but at other times when they spontaneously wish to feel their own
masculinity.
When transvestites report on their daydreaming, one senses an effort to
play the part of being women; their daydreams are busy, complicated
stories, dazzling and often sexually exciting for them. The daydreams of
transsexuals are usually quiet and undramatic, in which are portrayed the
ordinary tasks of and clichés of ‘old-fashioned femininity’.
The clues to etiology in transvestism are less clear than those in male
transsexualism. Perhaps this is because no adequate studies have yet been
done of the parents of transvestites. A psychiatrist sometimes encounters
transsexuals when still children and can study their infancy through the
eyes of their parents, but these opportunities are not available with
transvestites, who are seen in late adolescence or adulthood. So we have
only an impressionistic picture of etiology.
Some theorize that fetishistic cross-dressing is biologically induced, but
again there is no direct evidence, just the conviction that such conditions
must be biologically produced because they are so fixed and difficult to
treat.
Transvestites do not give a history of the close, symbiotic mother-son
relationship, nor do the few mothers of transvestites so far studied. They
do not give a history of very early femininity but on the contrary tell of
(and photographs in family albums illustrate) a period of several years of
masculine development. Then, typically, comes the story that a female
dresses this masculine little boy in women’s clothes. This experience,
forced on an already masculine boy who can sense the humiliation aimed
at him, is not sexually exciting. But in
TRANSSEXUALISM AND TRANSVESTISM 175
anatomical parts are used or desired, nor the vagaries of societies’ customs,
nor whether the practice is common to a majority or minority, but rather on
the meaning—conscious and unconscious—of the sexual act for the actor,
that is, on the dynamics of hostility. That is why I call transsexualism a
variant and transvestism a perversion.
A psychodynamic area into which I cannot venture now (it will be taken
up in a subsequent work on perversion) surfaces when we consider the
emotionally powerful women, more powerful than even the fully
masculine hero portrayed in transvestite pornography. That is the concept
of the phallic woman. Certainly, the transvestite in women’s clothes is the
absolute proof of the existence of a phallic woman; he is attempting to
appear like a woman but he has the superior attribute of a penis beneath
the clothes. Even stranger, despite his knowledge of the structure of female
genitals,* he believes females also can be phallic women; for the women
drawn in the illustrations have visibly phallic attributes: dark and
dangerous beauty, whips between their legs, breasts like bombs, capacity
to capture and subdue the portrayed hero.
Perversion originates from various sorts of hostility. The first is that
someone acted threateningly to the child. A second is one’s threats against
oneself, i.e. the conscious sense of guilt and the more complicated
interplay of unconscious guilt, which lead to many of the details of the
ritual that is the perverse act. But at least as important is a third form of
hostility: that which the perverse act directs out upon others. The
perversion, I believe, enacts a revenge in which is represented the person
who originally inflicted trauma, with this person, in the perverse act, now
overcome. The victim has become the victor, and the attacker of childhood
the defeated. In transvestism, the victim is the little boy who was
humiliated with the threat of loss of masculinity; the victor is the now-
grown man who so emphatically affirms his maleness just at the point at
which he would be repeating the original trauma. When in women’s
clothes and with an erection he can achieve over the villainous women the
ultimate triumph of maleness: his penis’s orgasm. The women
have been vanquished, and the little boy, by a roundabout route that
recapitulates the details of the childhood trauma, has preserved his
maleness and his sexual capacity (6).
(For fuller, more psychodynamic discussions of perversion, especially
the mechanisms at work in homosexuality and transvestism, the reader
should turn to other workers such as Freud, Fenichel, Khan, Bak, and
McDougall.)
I have referred to transvestism and especially transsexualism as having
clear-cut clinical pictures and antecedent etiologies— a presentation that
must now be explained and softened with some uncertainty. I minimized
the fact that other feminine males and masculine females, considered
transsexuals by many, neither fit my clinical definition nor present all the
above etiological factors. In other words, the description attempts a clarity
that does not attend to cases with mixed features of transsexualism and
transvestism or effeminate homosexuality.
However, this has not been so much inaccurate as incomplete. The full
clinical picture does exist in a number of subjects, and when it does most if
not all of the etiological features are present. And the more the clinical
picture is obscured by opposite-gender manifestations (for example, a
feminine male who nonetheless has had a period of fetishistic cross-
dressing and who was married as a man for some years), the less of the
etiological features are present (5). My position, therefore, is that as one
changes the etiological factors, one changes the clinical picture. I would
underline the proposition that the male who gets sexually excited by
women’s clothes has had a period of masculinity in childhood.
There is a group of men, seen these days by our research team in much
greater numbers than we see transsexuals, who also appear quite feminine.
They all want their bodies feminized, though not all want female genitals.
All other researchers call them transsexuals. I do not, though at a quick
glance they certainly seem to be. To me they are not, for the following
reasons:
(1) History. They have not been feminine since birth but had periods of
masculinity in childhood; have the capacity to create perversions (usually
fetishism, most often transvestism); have made love to women and usually
have married; have
178 THE TRANSSEXUAL EXPERIMENT
his life that he lives all the time as a woman.* In the last few years, he has rid
himself of his profession as a man, has gotten rid of almost all his men’s
clothes, has had all his facial hair removed, has let his hair grow so long that he
no longer needs a wig but can set it in a woman’s fashion, passes as a woman,
and has been taking estrogens in order to get some breast growth and softening
of body build. He thinks of himself as a woman, goes into the world accepted as
a woman and supports himself as a woman. But he still loves his penis and its
erections. He does not want a ‘sex change’ operation.
Over many years of experimentation and learning, this man has laboriously
worked on creating a feminine identity (one does not see such labor in the
transsexual). This process makes use of conscious imitation, mimicry (with its
hostility), acting, as well as non-conscious techniques akin to those used by
imposters and those actors who can only play themselves.
How does he differ from a transsexual ?
(1) He enjoys his penis. He is careful to take enough estrogen to give him
some breast fullness but not enough to kill his erectile capacity. He does not
want to lose his sexual excitement induced by women’s garments.
(2) Although he no longer lives as a man whose life is interrupted by cross-
dressing, masculine qualities persist. When necessary, he can effortlessly be
masculine on the telephone and even publicly (though the long hair is an
inconvenience). He still has, and himself senses, traits that he considered
masculine when he lived as a man. He prides himself on his intellectual
competitiveness, his skill in argument, his ‘clear-stated rather than fuzzy-
minded’ thinking; and if he considers himself to be a better woman than any
woman, it is because he carries inside of himself, he feels, an understanding of
men that makes him able to be more charming as a woman with men than
biologically normal women can be.
* We find this as a typical progress. I wonder if in part it results from the lowering
of androgen levels with age. With their penis less thrust in awareness by male
hormones, the balance between fetishism and femininity shifts to the latter. It may be
that this outcome is not rare but what would often happen if there were no dangers in
society for transvestites. Perhaps the clinical picture we see now is a forme fruste, an
artifact, and that the femininity becomes a more successful piece of character
structure as the years pass and the transvestite tires of the conflict between his
masculinity and his femininity. Since also he is repeatedly rewarded when cross-
dressing, both by the sense of calmness that he begins to get in later years and by the
intense erotic gratification that has accompanied the act, the balance will tip for some
toward living more exclusively in women’s clothes if that is less dangerous.
180 THE TRANSSEXUAL EXPERIMENT
who get sexually excited by women’s clothes and that the transvestite, in
all his variant forms, has, unlike the transsexual, both a history of
masculinity starting in childhood and evidences of that masculinity in his
present life.
Chapter 13
1. Benjamin, H. (1966). The Transsexual Phenomenon. New York: Julian
Press.
2. Freud, S. (1905). Three Essays on the Theory of Sexuality. S.E. 7.
3. Green, R. and Money, J. (eds.) (1969). Transsexualism and Sex
Reassignment. Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins Press.
4. Prince, C. V. (1965). ‘Survey of 390 Cases of Transvestism’. Read at
Western Divisional Meeting APA, Honolulu.
5. Stoller, R. J. (1968). Sex and Gender. New York: Science House;
London: Hogarth Press.
6. — (1970). ‘Pornography and Perversion’. Arch. Gen. Psychiat. 22.
7. Freud, S. (1927). ‘Fetishism’. S.E. 21.
8. — (1938). ‘Splitting of the Ego in the Process of Defence’. S.E. 23.