ABSTRACT

This book critically explores the history of gender verification in international sport, to show how culture, politics, and science come together to produce "femaleness" and, consequently, the female body as we know it.

Tracing gender verification policies and practices in sport since the 1930s till the present, the book shows how and why medical "sex tests" have been used to "verify" women athletes’ femaleness, in ways that both reflect and have shaped broader social and scientific ideas about femaleness in the process. Exploring how geopolitics, gender, class and race relations intertwined with scientific ideas about femaleness and womanhood to shape gender verification, the book shows how sports competitions became a battleground where new and old ideas about sex difference collided. By mapping the social, historical, and material instability of sex and gender, it shows why so much investment has been placed in distinguishing femaleness from maleness in sport and beyond.

The book will be of interest to researchers, later-year undergraduate and graduate students in a broad range of areas including gender studies, sports studies, social and historical studies of science and medicine. It will also be relevant to sports policy as it historically and conceptually contextualises gender verification policies.

chapter Chapter 1|23 pages

Introduction

Gender verification, sex difference, and the body

chapter Chapter 2|19 pages

Sex instability from the 1920s to the 1950s

chapter Chapter 3|20 pages

Pure and polluted bodies in Cold War sports

chapter Chapter 4|18 pages

Sex screening and diagnosis in the Olympics

chapter Chapter 5|21 pages

Gender fraud and masquerade in the 1970s and 1980s

chapter Chapter 6|21 pages

Gendered suspicions at the turn of the millennia