At the dawn of the twenty-first century, human beings have begun
to re-imagine and re-configure some of the most fundamental aspects
of nature and culture. Stepping into a social and biological landscape
that could scarcely have been imagined a few decades ago, homosexual,
bisexual, and transgendered people are at the forefront of this
process, offering new paradigms of sexuality and gender for all
of us to consider. As part of this (re)visioning, both futuristic
and indigenous sources of inspiration are being consulted. As transgendered
scholar Zachary Nataf observes:
In the search for new vocabularies and labels, terms like "shapeshifter"
and "morphing" have come to be used to refer to gender identity
and sexual style presentations and their fluidity. "Shapeshifter,"
originally from Native American culture, was introduced into current
popular culture from science fiction, especially a new offshoot
of the cyberpunk subgenre made famous by William Gibson and exemplified
by the work of Octavia E. Butler, the African-American author
of the *Xenogenesis* series. Butler's books are inhabited by genetics-manipulating
aliens, a polygendered species whose sexuality is multifarious
and who are "impelled to metamorphosis," whose survival in fact
depends upon their "morphological change, genetic diversity, and
adaptations." --Zachary I. Nataf, *The Future: the Postmodern
Lesbian Body and Transgender Trouble*<1>
However, one need not look into the future or on "alien worlds"
to find appropriate models: shape-shifting and morphing creatures
are not merely the stuff of fantasy or technology. The animal world
- right now, here on earth - is brimming with countless gender variations
and shimmering with sexual possibilities: entire lizard species
that consist only of females who reproduce by virgin birth, and
also have sex with each other; the multi-gendered society of the
ruff, with four distinct categories of male birds, some of whom
court and mate with one another; female spotted hyenas and bears
who copulate and give birth through their "penile" clitorises; male
greater rheas who possess "vaginal" phalluses (like the females
of their species) and raise young in two-father families; female
chimps who avoid pregnancy for years at a time by stimulating their
own nipples, and seal populations in which more than 90% of the
males do not reproduce; the vibrant transsexualities of coral reef
fish, and the dazzling intersexualities of gynandromorphs and chimeras.<2>
In their quest for "postmodern" patterns of gender and sexuality,
human beings are simply catching up with the species that have preceded
us in evolving sexual and gender diversity - and the aboriginal
cultures that have long recognized this.<3> The
very melding of indigenous cosmologies and fractal sexualities suggested
in the passage above is already well underway - but within the realm
of science *fact*, not fiction.
At the beginning of the new millennium, it also appears that the
lives of lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgendered people are once
again being defined and "imagined" through the lens of science and
technology. Issues such as the "naturalness" of homosexuality (and
by extension, nonreproductive heterosexuality and biotechnology),
the existence of a putative "gay gene" and the specter of selective
"elimination" of homosexuality, the impact of reproductive technologies
on lesbian and gay parenting, and the role of medicine in defining
and mediating transgendered identities have assumed a prominence
in both the popular and academic discourse that belies their deep
roots in medical/pathological models of homosexuality and gender
identity. What, if anything, does the occurrence of homosexuality,
transgender, and nonprocreative heterosexuality in other species
have to say about these issues? And what are their wider implications
with regard to nonreproductive sex and technology?
Homosexuality and transgender of various types have been documented
in hundreds of animal species worldwide.<4> While
the details of these phenomena are significant from a strictly zoological
standpoint, they also hold enormous implications for human sexuality
and gender - but not in the ways one might initially suppose. Certainly
the occurrence of homosexual behavior among animals challenges conventional
ideas about the "(un)naturalness" of homosexuality (or any form
of nonreproductive sexuality). But this essay will also challenge
the simplistic application of animal behavior to people's lives
- both by those in the queer communities as well as by those who
oppose nonprocreative sexuality. We will consider how animal homosexuality
and transgender vary along extragenetic dimensions (social, temporal,
protocultural, etc.), and explore how these phenomena and their
interpretations can and cannot be applied to the study of human
(homo)sexuality and (trans)gender. More broadly, this essay interrogates
and challenges the influence of biotechnology on how we conceptualize
current, past, and future queer (and non-queer) lives. Once we understand
how sexuality is both profoundly grounded in the body and yet deeply
shaped by socio-historical forces that transcend biology, the "promises"
as well as the "threats" posed by biotechnology - and its impact
on (non)reproductive sexuality for all of us - will be revealed
as largely illusory.
Two Hundred Million Years of Nonreproductive Sex
Sex has always been uncoupled from reproduction. The "nonprocreative
superfluousness" of sexuality does not depend on human technology,
nor is it a recent innovation: nonreproductive sexual behaviors
(and even forms of technology) are widespread among nonhuman animals,
and have an ancient history. Homosexual behaviors, for example,
occur in more than 450 different kinds of animals worldwide, including
everything from same-sex courtship and sexual activities to pair-bonding;
they are found in every major geographic region and every major
animal group, and have probably existed for millions of years. Homosexuality
among primates, for example, has been traced back to at least the
Oligocene epoch, 24 - 37 million years ago (based on its distribution
among contemporary primates). Some scientists place its original
appearance even earlier in the evolutionary line leading to mammals,
at around 200 million years ago, and it has probably existed for
much longer among other animal groups.<5>
But nonprocreative sexuality is not limited to homosexual encounters.
Specific nonreproductive heterosexual practices in the animal world
are many and varied, and they often parallel homosexual behaviors
as well as the wide variety of nonprocreative sexual practices found
in humans. These include various forms of oral sex (including fellatio
and genital licking); stimulation of a partner's genitals with the
hands or other appendages (such as flippers), including vaginal
penetration with the fingers (in primates); anal stimulation, including
penetration with fingers or oral-anal contact; rump rubbing and
even heterosexual anal intercourse; mounting that does not involve
full genital contact (including reverse mounting, in which the female
mounts the male); and a wide variety of masturbation techniques.
In fact, masturbation among animals provides evidence for an early
form of "technology" in the context of nonprocreative sexuality.
In addition to using their hands, feet, or tails, apes and monkeys
employ various objects and implements to stimulate themselves sexually,
and even deliberately create masturbatory tools by cutting or forming
materials such as leaves or twigs (often in highly creative ways).
One male orang-utan, for example, ingeniously fashioned an implement
by pushing a hole through a leaf with his finger. He inserted his
erect penis into this "orifice," then rubbed the leaf up and down
the shaft to stimulate himself. One female chimpanzee inserted the
stem of a leaf into her vagina, often lubricating it with saliva
and manipulating it with her hand so as to stimulate herself internally.
In one instance, she rocked back and forth with the stem inserted,
rubbing the leaf against a vertical surface so that the stem actually
vibrated inside of her.
Many animals also routinely mate (or engage in other sexual activities)
with opposite-sex partners outside of the breeding season or when
the female is not ovulating - including during menstruation and
pregnancy (or, in birds, during the incubation period). Not only
is this found in a wide variety of species, but such nonreproductive
activity frequently constitutes a significant portion of all sexual
behavior. Heterosexual activity also occurs among sexually immature
animals, between adults and juveniles, between genetically related
animals, between members of different species, and sometimes even
between live and dead animals - all instances in which reproduction
is not optimized (if not altogether impossible). In addition to
nonprocreative sexual behaviors, actual forms of "birth control"
- i.e. ways of preventing pregnancy - occur in many animals. Besides
infrequent copulation or mating during times when fertilization
cannot occur, more than 20 different strategies have been identified
whereby females are able to limit, control, and prevent insemination.
These include copulatory plugs (gelatinous barriers that form or
are deposited in the female's reproductive tract, blocking insemination),
and semen ejection by females following mating. One of the most
extraordinary forms of birth control was recently discovered in
chimpanzees: nipple stimulation. As in a number of other mammals,
the regular reproductive cycles of female chimps are inhibited or
interrupted while they are suckling infants. Some females without
infants have learned that by stimulating their own nipples they
can effectively mimic this physiological effect, thereby preventing
themselves from conceiving even though they are not actually lactating.
In some cases, chimps have avoided pregnancy for as long as a decade
by employing this ingenious "contraceptive" technique. Actual abortion
occurs in many species as well, including baboons, sea lions, deer,
and foxes. Abortions may be either spontaneous; a result of stress
and harassment from males; or (in primates) deliberately self-induced
via physical means or the ingestion of abortion-causing plants.
Many animals also separate and reorder key reproductive events.
We are used to thinking of breeding as a predetermined sequence,
one stage leading inevitably to the next: ovulation followed by
mating followed by fertilization followed by embryonic development
followed by birth (or egg-laying). However, significant gaps and
rearrangements of these events are possible. For instance, sperm
storage - where a female caches sperm in her reproductive tract,
which she uses to fertilize her eggs weeks, months, or even years
later - can temporally separate mating from fertilization, and can
also result in ovulation taking place *after* insemination. And
delayed implantation - in which a fertilized egg remains in "suspended
animation" for months prior to being implanted in the womb - can
separate fertilization from fetal development during pregnancy in
many species.<6>
Nonreproductive sex (both heterosexual and homosexual) and various
forms of "birth control" and reproductive manipulation are therefore
nothing new, nor are they unique to the human species. What is relatively
new, however, is the condemnation and suppression of nonprocreative
sexuality, especially homosexuality, by human cultures and societies.
Indeed, such condemnation extends to the scientific discussion of
these phenomena and continues to this day in the zoological discourse.
Biologists consistently react to these phenomena with a mixture
of disbelief, confusion, and even outright hostility. Sexual and
gender variance in animals are routinely described in scientific
publications with overtly homophobic or heterosexist language, including
words such as "aberrant," "unnatural," "abnormal," "bizarre," "inappropriate"
- even, in extreme cases, "perverse," "immoral," or "criminal" (mirroring
attitudes toward human homosexuality/transgender in the wider culture.)
Although the intellectual climate is certainly improving and many
zoologists no longer harbor such negative attitudes, biased responses
are not just a thing of the past. At a conference in the mid-1990s,
for example, primatologist Linda Wolfe provoked incredulity and
outrage from her colleagues for daring to suggest that animals may
engage in (homo)sexual activity purely for pleasure. In 1995, colleagues
of zoologist Paul Vasey responded to his research on homosexual
behavior with comments that the monkeys he was studying were "perverts"
who "didn't know how to use their genitalia properly." In a report
published in 1997, same-sex courtship and sexual activity in fruit
flies (as well as refusal of heterosexual advances) were characterized
by scientists as "abnormal," "aberrant," and a "defect." And in
1998, an ornithologist described homosexual mounting in sandpipers
as "puzzling" and "one of the strangest behaviors" he had observed.<7>
Even when homophobia and heterosexism are not this overt, they pervade
much evolutionary theorizing, which insists that every animal behavior,
including homosexuality, must have some reproductive "function."
Scientists continue to suggest that homosexuality is simply a way
of practicing for heterosexual mating, a method to attract opposite-sex
partners, a form of social bonding that "relieves tension" or otherwise
improves reproductive success, a type of "sperm competition," and
several other more far-fetched "explanations." Even though there
is ample evidence against such proposals as the sole "reason" for
nonreproductive sexuality,<8> they persist because
current paradigms of biology cannot countenance animal behaviors
that are performed exclusively (or even primarily) for sexual pleasure.
Sexual activity has long been relieved of its procreative function
in other species as well as our own. Unfortunately, sex has not
yet been "liberated" from reproduction in the minds of most scientists
and, by extension, nonscientists. What good is technology that uncouples
sexuality from procreation when societal attitudes continue to insist
that they remain inextricably linked?
"Biological Degeneracy" and the (Un)Naturalness of Homosexuality
All too often the occurrence of homosexuality in animals is equated
with its "naturalness" and, by extension, its "acceptability" in
people. This interpretation is far too naive. The concept of "naturalness"
is an extremely dubious one, whether wielded by the lesbian and
gay community or by right-wing politicians. Beliefs about the occurrence
of homosexuality in animals have been used historically both to
support *and* condemn homosexuality in humans - often simultaneously
within the same society, and by scientists and nonscientists alike.
In contrast to the "naturalness" view that is prevalent today, for
example, in many historical contexts homosexuality was equated with
"animalistic" behavior and persecuted on exactly that basis. The
Nazis classified homosexuals as "subhumans" suffering from an innate
genetic "defect," and homosexual men who were subjected to medical
experiments in concentration camps were labeled "test animals."
In fact, Adolf Hitler was heavily influenced by the writings of
Georg Lanz von Liebenfels, whose most important work was entitled
*Theozoology, or Tales of Sodom's Apelings and the Gods' Electron*.
This pamphlet described the struggle between an "inferior race"
of dark-skinned animal-men ("Sodom's Apelings") and a heroic master-race
of techno-humans equipped with electronic body parts.<9>
During this time period, therefore, beliefs about the "bestial"
nature of homosexuality only strengthened anti-homosexual sentiments
in society rather than eliminated them. A revealing illustration
of the continuity, complexity, and coincidence of these societal,
historical, and scientific attitudes toward animal homosexuality
is provided by the following timeline, which juxtaposes incidents
relating to jackdaws (a type of crow), nonprocreative sexuality,
and - appropriately enough - the city of Linz (along with other
Austrian locations).
1935: Konrad Lorenz publishes the first zoological descriptions
of homosexual pairs in jackdaws, claiming that such behavior only
occurs in captivity and is not a feature of "natural" populations.
That same year, Leopold Obermayer, a Jewish homosexual imprisoned
in Dachau, is assaulted by an SS-commander who yells, "You are
not a human being, you are a beast!" Two years previously, the
Nazis burn the library of Magnus Hirschfeld, a Jewish homosexual
who in 1900 published one of the earliest scientific surveys of
animal homosexuality.<10>
1939: The first Jewish prisoner at Mauthausen, a concentration
camp near Linz, is a Viennese-born man arrested for being a homosexual;
he is killed a year later. Meanwhile, Adolf Hitler launches one
of the largest campaigns of art-theft in history, earning him
the nickname "The Jackdaw of Linz" (after the jackdaw's plundering
habits). One strategy for seizing artworks is to accuse their
owners of engaging in illegal homosexual activity. An altarpiece
stolen in this way is hidden by the Nazis in a salt-mine at Alt
Aussee, not far from where Konrad Lorenz would later study homosexual
pairing in geese.<11>
1979: Homosexual pair-bonding in wild jackdaws is observed
for the first time, refuting Lorenz's pronouncements to the contrary
44 years earlier. Zoologists discover that about 10% of widowed
females in a Netherlands population form homosexual pairs, while
approximately 5% of trios include same-sex bonding. Around the
same time in Vienna, a zoologist describes homosexuality in female
hedgehogs as "abnormal" activity that will cause "damage" to the
animals.<12>
1989: Konrad Lorenz asserts that the word *homosexual*
should not be used to describe same-sex pairs in geese because
not all members of such pairs engage in sexual activity or pair
exclusively with same-sex partners. Yet he unhesitatingly labels
opposite-sex pairs "heterosexual" even though sexual activity
is not an important component of male-female pairings in this
species, and not all such birds pair exclusively with opposite-sex
partners.<13>
1999: The city of Linz installs a webcam to record the
behavior of jackdaws and make video images available live on the
internet. A nest belonging to a heterosexual pair is chosen as
the focus of activity. The website emphasizes the reproductive
behavior of the species, omitting all mention of homosexual pairings
as well as the many types of nonprocreative heterosexual behavior
that have been documented in jackdaws.<14>
Lorenz's equating of homosexuality with "unnatural" behavior -
as well as his unwillingness to apply the term *homosexual* to gander
pairs and thereby invite human-animal comparisons (or imply full
heterosexual-homosexual equivalence) - is especially problematic
in light of his activities during the Third Reich. As a member of
the Nazi party in Austria and an official lecturer for its Office
of Race Policy, Lorenz did not hesitate to draw analogies between
animals and people to support and develop the doctrines of "biological
degeneracy," "racial purity," and the "elimination" of "inferior"
or "asocial" elements. Among his most blatant assertions in this
regard are published statements that physical and moral "decay"
in people is "identical" to the effects of domestication on animals
and that the "defective type" among humans is like "the domesticated
animal that can be bred in the dirtiest stable and with any sexual
partner." He also wrote that "Precisely in the large field of instinctive
behavior, humans and animals can be directly compared... these studies
will be fruitful for both theoretical as well as practical concerns
of race policy." In his private correspondence, Lorenz also employed
human-animal comparisons to express his anti-Semitism, for instance
when he described a species of duck as having "an ugly Jewish nose."<15>
Today, we must understand how our interpretation of animal behavior
- particularly sexuality - has been filtered through this history,
and the dangers inherent in drawing comparisons between animals
and people. Animals do many things that we do not consider acceptable
human behaviors - cannibalism, rape, incest, etc. - while humans,
in turn, engage in many activities not found among animals without
such activities being labeled "unnatural" (for example, writing
e-mail, cooking food, or waltzing). So anyone today who wishes to
use the occurrence of homosexuality - or nonreproductive heterosexuality
- in animals to support their "legitimacy" in people must be careful:
it can just as easily be used to argue that these things are "animalistic"
rather than "natural." Indeed, some current critiques of reproductive
technologies echo Nazi beliefs that homosexuality was simultaneously
"bestial" and "against nature." One anti-abortionist, for instance,
recently stated that "post-procreative" technologies (including
techniques that allow gays and lesbians to have children) are "animalizing"
people by eliminating "natural" (i.e. reproductive) sexuality.<16>
We simply cannot base our decisions about the "morality," "normality,"
or "desirability" of human behaviors on whether such behaviors occur
in the animal world. More specifically, people who are lesbian,
gay, bisexual, or transgendered do not need to "justify" their existence
by pointing to examples among animals. Even if homosexuality and
transgender were *never* found in the animal world, lesbians, gays,
and trans people would still deserve full equality as human beings,
and freedom from discrimination, prejudice, and violence (as do
computer users, chefs, and ballroom dancers, none of whom can find
analogues for their behaviors or identities in the animal world).
Finally, the intervention of technology in the dissemination of
information about animal behavior will do nothing to further our
knowledge unless it is also accompanied by a corresponding advancement
in attitudes and beliefs. The Linz webcam and associated website
essentially erase all traces of the jackdaw's nonprocreative sexuality,
thereby perpetuating the history of silence, misinformation, and
distortion that has surrounded this species - like so many others
- for more than half a century. Information on homosexuality and
nonreproductive heterosexuality in jackdaws has now been available
for many decades. Yet to thousands of web-surfers, the jackdaw is
still presented as a "perfectly" heterosexual creature whose behavior
is geared exclusively toward breeding. Under the guise of technological
"improvement" and "access," the Linz webcam has unwittingly completed
a circle that began 64 years previously when Lorenz insisted that
homosexual pairing was not part of the "natural" behavior of jackdaws.
Genetic Mistakes or Mistaken Genetics?
Much of the current discourse on queer life - both popular and academic
- has been infused with the apparition of the "gay gene" or "gay
marker" - Does it exist? How can it be isolated? What are its ethical
and practical implications? Most of this discussion either overtly
or implicitly characterizes the "gay gene" as a portion of genetic
code that *absolutely* determines sexual orientation. It is unlikely
that such a marker will be discovered, because it is unlikely that
such a marker exists - just as it is unlikely that there is an absolute
genetic determinant of compassion, or playfulness, or integrity,
or the ability to perceive beauty. This does not mean, of course,
that homosexuality lacks a genetic basis - only that nongenetic
factors are equally, if not more, important in the expression of
(homo)sexuality, regardless of whether it has a genetic component.
Theories about the origin of sexual orientation in humans simply
cannot - and should not - be built or modelled on nonhuman animal
behavior. The differences in homosexuality between nonhuman species
(or between different human cultures, historical periods, individuals,
etc.) - are too enormous, and these differences simply multiply
when we attempt to make comparisons between human and nonhuman species.
Nevertheless, an understanding of the extra-genetic components of
animal homosexuality *is* relevant for how we think about human
homosexuality. In animals, numerous factors in addition to genetics
affect the expression of (homo)sexuality - social, temporal, geographic,
environmental, individual, even (proto)cultural influences. This
challenges the idea that animal homosexuality is strictly "instinctual"
and invariant, and this perspective is extremely valuable for studies
of human (homo)sexuality. If nothing else, it provides further support
for the idea emerging from most studies of human sexual orientation,
that sexuality results from a complex interaction of factors rather
than being a polarized "environment vs. genetics" issue.
The socio-cultural dimensions of animal homosexuality also expose
the limitations and conceptual underpinnings of the "nature vs.
nurture" debate. Too many times, evidence of homosexuality in animals
is used to bolster the idea that homosexuality is innate, genetically
controlled, or otherwise fixed at (or before) birth. In the process,
the complexities and nuances of sexual orientation and gender -
in both animals and humans - are overlooked. In fact, the plurality
of homosexualities found in both human and nonhuman species suggests
a blurring of the supposedly distinct categories of biology and
society. On the one hand, it is no longer possible to attribute
the diversity of human (homo)sexual expression solely to the influence
of culture or history, since such diversity may in fact be part
of our biological endowment, an inherent capacity for "sexual plasticity"
that is shared with many other species. On the other hand, it is
equally meaningful to speak of the "culture" of homosexuality in
animals, since the extent and range of variation that is found (between
individuals, or populations, or species) exceeds that provided by
genetic programming, and begins to enter the realm of individual
habits, learned behaviors, and even community-wide "traditions."
Evidence for a genetic component to homosexual behavior in animals
has been accumulating and will continue to accumulate in the next
decades. Yet it is also clear that social, environmental, and individual
factors are at least as important as genetic ones, especially in
"higher animals" such as mammals and some birds that have complex
forms of social organization and highly flexible behavioral interactions.
The expression of homosexuality often varies widely between different
social contexts, age groups, activities, individuals, and even populations
and geographic areas, in ways that transcend any possible genetic
"control." For example, in species such as the ruff (a type of sandpiper),
individuals differ sharply in their participation in homosexual
activity, yet the genetic differences that are known to exist between
such individuals cut across their differences in homosexual behavior
rather than falling in line with their sexual variations. In addition,
homosexual (and other sexual) activity has a strong "cultural,"
social, and/or learned dimension in a number of species, especially
primates. Ultimately, then, it is of relatively little importance
whether there is an actual homosexual "gene." Even if homosexuality
is shown definitively to have a genetic component (as is likely),
it will always remain just that - a *component*, one part of a much
larger picture that includes the totality of a human or nonhuman
animal's biology and social environment.
Undoubtedly attempts will still be made to "find" a putative "gay
gene" in people and to "eradicate" homosexuality by eliminating
or changing this "gay marker." But sexuality is far more complex,
fluid, and mysterious than this - and infinitely more resilient
as well, precisely *because* of its nonbiological components. It
may indeed become possible to eliminate or alter some *forms* of
homosexuality through "gene therapy." However, in the twenty-first
century - as in centuries past - just as many people will continue
to fall in love with individuals of the same sex when they aren't
"supposed" to - after leading "perfectly" heterosexual lives, for
example, or when nothing in their genes indicates that they "should"
be other than straight, or in spite of the fact that their parents
were carefully "screened" for the "gay marker." And such people
will continue to discover and celebrate the value of their love,
regardless of whether science or society considers it abnormal.
Against the Privileging of Genetic Parenthood
While biotechnology may allow sex to be more fully uncoupled from
reproduction for straight people, sex is *already* separate from
procreation for lesbian and gay people. If heterosexuals look to
technology in some measure to "restore" pleasure to their sexuality
by removing reproduction from it, then homosexuals look to technology
to "restore" reproduction to their already pleasurable sexual lives.
In North America at least, many gays and lesbians are eager to become
parents, and reproductive technologies are often touted as the way
to accomplish this. The issue is typically framed in terms of how
scientific advances will allow lesbian and gay couples to finally
"have their own children." Highly speculative ideas about cloning
and male pregnancy (among other things) are offered as ways to fulfill
the elusive dream of becoming "real parents" (i.e., like heterosexuals).
Of course, gay couples can *already* have children together (at
least, in a few political jurisdictions) - it's just that such children
do not share both partners' genes. Certainly there may be some amazing
biotechnological developments in the coming years that will allow
or mimic such genetic sharing. However, an even *more* significant
advance will be the destigmatizing and perhaps even valorizing of
individuals (both gay and straight) who choose not to have children
of their own - by remaining childless, or by raising children who
do not share all or any of their genes. Every person - regardless
of their sexual orientation or gender identity - unequivocally has
the right to reproduce in whatever way they desire, and this is
especially important for queers, who have historically been denied
- and continue to be denied - the right to have families as well
as access to reproductive technologies.<17>
Gays still have their children taken away from them, lesbians are
still prevented from using sperm banks to become pregnant, and same-sex
marriages are still illegal in most parts of the world because such
relationships are deemed "nonprocreative." Nevertheless, it is also
important to question the technological privileging of genetic ties
and the nuclear family. Specifically, it must be recognized that
there is nothing inherently "natural," moral, or requisite about
bearing and/or raising children of one's own.
If we choose to look outside our own species - and as already mentioned,
we can only do so with considerable caution - then the animal data
show quite clearly that sexuality and pair-bonding exist independently
of reproduction, that many animals simply do not procreate, and
that the "drive" to reproduce is far from automatic or "instinctive."
Animal populations survive and thrive with huge numbers of nonbreeding
individuals,<18> who are just as "(un)natural"
as the ones that do breed. There is a tendency to regard the urge
to procreate among animals as automatic, all-pervasive, and unstoppable.
While heterosexual interactions often do have this quality, there
are just as many examples of animals who do not reproduce: individuals
who actively remove themselves from the breeding cycle, whose nonparticipation
in reproduction is guaranteed by the overall social organization
of the species or by physiological constraints, who produce offspring
rarely (if ever), or who lead complete lives without (or after)
reproducing.
Why do animals not reproduce? Biologists have coined the term "reproductive
suppression" to refer to various forms of nonbreeding, implying
that all animals would breed if they could, but are somehow "prevented"
from doing so. However, the underlying mechanisms involved in nonbreeding
are far more complex than this term implies. Numerous social, physiological,
environmental, and individual factors are implicated, often interacting
in ways that are still poorly understood. In some animals, procreation
is indeed actively "suppressed" - in wolves, for example, dominant
pack members often physically attack lower-ranking individuals who
try to mate. In other species, though, no coercion is involved.
Particularly in birds with communal breeding systems (such as pied
kingfishers), as well as primates such as tamarins and marmosets,
scientists describe individuals not as "unwillingly" suppressed
in their breeding efforts, but rather as "choosing" to forgo procreation
or exercising "self-restraint" in their reproductive participation.
Procreation is often a physically demanding and exceedingly dangerous
undertaking that some animals may also simply "avoid." Nonbreeders
are often in better physical condition than breeders, since they
do not have to undergo the rigors of the reproductive and parenting
process. In fact, breeding could even be considered "suicidal" in
some cases, since it may lead to a reduced life expectancy. Male
bighorn sheep and female red deer that breed, for example, have
significantly higher mortality rates than nonbreeders. Finally,
the risk of acquiring sexually transmitted diseases (which are found
in a surprising number of animals) may also affect procreative activity.
For instance, female razorbills (a kind of bird) avoid reproductive
copulations with males when the risk of infection from STDs is greatest
(although they continue to engage in nonprocreative sexual activity,
i.e. mounting without direct genital contact). Heterosexual behavior
in a number of other species may also be curtailed by the potential
danger of STDs. In the end, then, there is no single "reason" why
animals don't reproduce: nonbreeding, like sexuality, is simply
a part of the mosaic of animals' lives, manifesting itself in many
different ways. Heterosexuality (like homosexuality) constitutes
a whole range of behaviors and life histories, not a single inalterable
template that every animal must follow. And nonbreeding is one of
the many ways to be "heterosexual." Once animals establish a family,
an enormous number of different parenting arrangements can be employed
- only a small fraction of which involve a "nuclear family" configuration
with a mother and father both caring for their own offspring. Nearly
300 species of mammals and birds have developed adoption, parenting
assistance, and "daycare" systems, for example, in which offspring
are raised or cared for by animals other than their biological parents.
Such systems can be viewed both as examples of adults being freed
from their parenting duties by a natural "helping" system, and instances
of animals forgoing a portion of their reproductive "responsibilities"
in order to pursue other activities.
So human beings are not unique in sometimes opting not to pass on
their own genes. In addition to developing reproductive technologies,
then, we need to begin placing less emphasis on whether children
are "truly" our own by virtue of sharing our genes, and more on
developing an awareness that people who do not have children - or
who raise "other" people's children through adoption, foster-parenting,
or other arrangements - are as much a part of the fabric of society.
Transforming Transgender
Reproductive technologies of the future could precipitate a fundamental
redefinition of male and female roles. However, a profound revisioning
of gender boundaries is already taking place in the realm of transgender,
both with and without technology. It may at first appear that transgendered
- especially transsexual - identities are thoroughly dependent on
medical technology. Current discourse often focuses on the extent
to which surgery and hormones can finally "create" an individual
of the "opposite" sex, while the quality, affordability, and ease
of "sex reassignment" technologies are very real issues for trans
people who choose to utilize them in their transitioning. After
a long history of being pathologized by medical models, transgendered
identities now seem to be linked - for better or worse - to the
"promises" and "marvels" of science and technology. As with reproductive
technologies, it is possible that the role of biotechnology in this
area will indeed move along a trajectory from reactionary to benign
to beneficial. However, twenty-first century advances in this arena
will lie not so much in technology, but in our conceptualization
and social enactment of gender.
(Trans)gender is as much - if not more so - about how we imagine
and perceive "male" and "female," "man" and "woman," "masculine"
and "feminine," as it is about what genitals or chromosomes or reproductive
capabilities a person has. Of course, every individual is fully
and unquestionably entitled to modify their body surgically, hormonally,
or by whatever means necessary to bring it in line with their internal
gender identity. Ultimately, however, it is likely that transgender
will become less, not more, dependent on "science and technology"
(surgery, body modification, etc.).<19> This
is because (trans)gendered identity belongs as much to the society
in which a person lives as it does to that person. There are cultures
around the world (and historical periods) that accept genetically
male individuals as "genuine" women and genetically female individuals
as "genuine" men even though they have not altered their bodies,
and cultures that "allow" or recognize individuals who "switch"
genders or occupy indeterminate gender spaces without using technology.
There are also animal societies where individuals which are biologically
male, for example, live and are accepted as females even though
their physical appearance is completely male (e.g. bighorn sheep),
or where gender-ambiguous individuals are fully integrated into
the species' social networks (e.g. hooded warblers). And there are
other societies - such as ours today - that continue to regard transgendered
people as "less than" people born male-bodied men or female-bodied
women no matter how much surgery or body modification they have
undergone.
In *Boys Don't Cry* - the recent cinematic dramatization about "preoperative"
(or "nonoperative") female-to-male trans person Brandon Teena -
there is a pivotal moment when Brandon's girlfriend Lana is forced
to look at Brandon's female genitals. Afterwards, in a stunning
demonstration of faith and insight, Lana continues to regard, defend,
and love Brandon as male/man/masculine in the face of the overwhelming
scorn, ridicule, and violence of those around them - and in spite
of the fact that "science and technology" have not altered Brandon's
physical appearance. The lives of transgendered people in the twenty-first
century - and anyone whose life is gendered, which is in fact everyone
- will have improved not only when technologies that "reassign"
sex (and reproduction) have advanced, but when we can all accept
the chosen gender(s) of those around us as unflinchingly, courageously,
and lovingly as Lana did.
The Infinitude of the Body
*When most effective, the technology of communication allows
us to bring the histories and experiences of others into our home,
but without changing our home. When most effective, the technology
of travel allows us to pass through the histories of other persons
with the "comforts of home," but without changing those histories.
When it is most effective, technology will have no effect at all.*
--James P. Carse
*Our malaise arises from this: ...infinite access to knowledge
that simply fails to interact with the body or with the imagination....
What we know and how we know it must have a basis in the flesh
- the whole flesh, not just a brain in a jar of formaldehyde.
The knowledge we want is neither utilitarian nor "pure" but celebratory....
and it must be *corporeal* rather than abstract, fleshless, mediated
by machine or by authority or by simulation*.--Hakim Bey<20>
Our bodies do not require technology to uncouple sex from reproduction:
sex always has been nonprocreative and always will be, regardless
of whether technology intervenes.<21> It is
our minds, cultures, societies, religions, and sciences, however,
that have ignored, stigmatized, suppressed, and avoided nonreproductive
sexuality - by defining "sex" as only heterosexual, penis-vagina
penetration for the purpose of conception rather than pleasure.
Yet our bodies contain an infinitude of possibilities beyond this
narrow definition, a multitude of sexualities and genders that require
little more than our awareness to set them in motion.
"Reproductive technologies" become necessary mainly because people
cannot - or will not - imagine and experience their desire beyond
an opposite-sex partner, or the missionary position, or sex-for-making-babies.
If people could change their sexual orientation and "become" homosexual
at will, for example, they would not need technology to free their
(hetero)sexuality from procreation - all they would need to do is
find a same-sex partner. Is the inability of most people to do so
a result of genetics, hormones, culture, society, politics...? Probably
all of these and more, but the very act of relying upon technology
to accomplish the same result is an acknowledgment of the powerful
forces - both social and biological - that shape and constrain desire.
And just because heterosexuality is "unlinked" from reproduction
through technology does not mean that it will automatically become
"pleasurable." Hanif Kureishi once described heterosexual sex as
"that stuff when the woman spends the whole time trying to come,
but can't, and the man spends the whole time trying to stop himself
coming, but can't."<22> Long after the "artificial
womb" has been perfected and the human genome has been fully sequenced,
we will still be dealing with the vicissitudes of male-female relations,
the negotiation of desire, the cultural and social expectations
and incompatibilities that are part of such interactions. Ultimately,
the body and its social environment cannot be completely transcended,
no matter how much technology is applied.
Fears about the "artificiality" of new reproductive technologies
are largely misplaced. The "natural" (animal) world contains an
unending variety of "artificial" manipulations, interruptions, avoidances,
reorderings, and terminations of reproductive events - from birth
control and homosexuality to cloning (parthenogenesis) and surrogate
parenting. So the "effects" of such technologies have actually been
with us for millions of years. And certainly the social, political,
and ethical dimensions of biotechnologies need to be carefully evaluated
- issues of commodification, access, mediation, and alienation from
the body being paramount among them. Beyond this, however, lies
the much larger question of how society views sexual pleasure. To
paraphrase James Carse: When most effective, the technology of (non)reproduction
will allow us to fully uncouple sexual relationships from procreation,
but without altering our fundamentally uneasy relationship to sexual
pleasure. Under the illusion of great strides of progress, therefore,
nothing really will have changed at all. The future history of sexuality,
then, lies not so much in its freedom from reproduction through
technology, but in its liberation from the repressive social constructs
that continue to devalue pleasure.
Notes
I would like to thank the following individuals for their insightful
questions and commentary which prompted me to consider many of the
issues discussed in this essay: Deb Price, Herve Morin, and Roz
Kaveney. Portions of this essay have been adapted from *Biological
Exuberance: Animal Homosexuality and Natural Diversity* (New York:
St.Martin's Press, 1999).
<1> Nataf, Zachary I. *Lesbians Talk Transgender*,
p.55.: Scarlet Press, London. 1996
<2> Gynandromorphs and chimeras are types
of intersexual animals, i.e. creatures that share both male and
female characteristics.
<3> Bagemihl, Bruce. "Left-Handed Bears
and Androgynous Cassowaries: Homosexual/Transgendered Animals and
Indigenous Knowledge," *Whole Earth* 100:pp. 77 - 83. 2000 (www.wholeearthmag.com/ArticleBin/338.html);
Bagemihl. *Biological Exuberance*, pp. 215 - 44.
<4> Transgender refers to the combining,
crossing over, or blurring of gender or sexual characteristics,
and includes transsexuality (sex-change), intersexuality (hermaphroditism),
and "transvestism" (mimicry of the opposite sex in appearance or
behavior). For further discussion of this terminology and the many
forms of homosexuality and transgender found in animals, see Bagemihl,
*Biological Exuberance*.
<5> Vasey, Paul L. "Homosexual Behavior
in Primates: A Review of Evidence and Theory," *International Journal
of Primatology* 16:pp. 173 - 204. 1995
Baker, Robin and Mark A. Bellis. *Human Sperm Competition: Copulation,
Masturbation, and Infidelity*. Chapman and Hall, London. 1995
<6> See Bagemihl, *Biological Exuberance*,
pp. 201 - 11 for more extensive discussion and references on nonreproductive
heterosexuality in animals.
<7> Vines, Gail. "Queer Creatures," *New
Scientist* 163(2198):pp. 32 - 35(www.newscientist.com/ns/19990807/queercreat.html);
1999 Paul L. Vasey, personal communication; Finley, K.D. et al.
"*dissatisfaction*, a Gene Involved in Sex-Specific Behavior and
Neural Development of *DROSOPHILA melanogaster*", *Proceedings of
the National Academy of Sciences* 94:pp. 913 - 18. 1997 Lanctot,
Richard B. "Sexual Attitudes at Northern Latitudes," *Natural History*
107(6):pp. 72 - 75. 1998. See Bagemihl, *Biological Exuberance*,
esp. pp. 87 - 106, for a comprehensive discussion of homophobia
and heterosexism in zoology.
<8> For detailed discussion and argumentation,
see Bagemihl, *Biological Exuberance*, esp. pp. 168 - 195.
<9> Plant, Richard. *The Pink Triangle:
The Nazi War Against Homosexuals*, pp. 27, 185. Henry Holt, New
York. 1986 Grau, Günter (ed.). *Hidden Holocaust? Gay and Lesbian
Persecution in Germany 1933 - 45*, p. 284. Cassell, London. 1995
Johansson, Warren and William A. Percy. "Homosexuals in Nazi Germany,"
*Simon Wiesenthal Center Annual* 7:pp. 225 - 63. 1990 Hamann, Brigitte.
*Hitler's Vienna*, pp. 217 - 18. Oxford University Press, New York.
1999
<10> Lorenz, Konrad (1935) "Der Kumpan
in der Umwelt des Vogels," *Journal für Ornithologie* 83:pp. 10
- 213, 289 - 413. 1935 Friedländer, Saul. *Nazi Germany and the
Jews*, Vol. I, p. 114. HarperCollins, New York. 1997 <11> Friedländer,
ibid., pp. 246 - 47 Roxan, David and Ken Wanstall. *The Jackdaw
of Linz: The Story of Hitler's Art Thefts*, p. 42. Cassell, London.
1964
<12> See Bagemihl, *Biological Exuberance*,
pp. 90, 606 - 10 for further details and full references.
<13> Lorenz, Konrad. *Hier bin ich - wo
bist du?* R. Piper, Munich. 1988
<14> www.linz.at/umwelt/natur/dohlen/ewebkam.htm
<15> Deichmann, Ute. *Biologists under
Hitler*, pp. 179 - 205. Harvard University Press, Cambridge. 1996
Klopfer, Peter H. *Politics and People in Ethology*, p. 59. Bucknell
University Press, Lewisburg. 1999
<16> Garrett, Pete.r. "Endgame: Reproductive
Technology and The Death of Natural Procreation," www.lifeuk.org/speech5.html.
1999
<17> For more on the difficulties faced
by gay and lesbian parents, see: Rochman, Sue. (1999) "Taking Aim
at Parents," *The Advocate*, June 22, pp. 78 - 80. 1999 Bull, Chris.
"A Year of Triumph and Pain," *The Advocate*, June 22, pp. 53 -
60. 1999
<18> Virtually every animal population
includes nonbreeding individuals, and many of these are still sexually
active. In some cases, as many as half (right whales), three-quarters
(blackbuck), or even 80 - 95% (New Zealand sea lions, northern elephant
seals, naked mole rats, some dragonfly species) of one or both sexes
do not reproduce. See Bagemihl, *Biological Exuberance*, pp. 196
- 208, for more details on nonbreeding as well as adoption among
animals.
<19> For some discussion of the autonomy
of transgendered identities from surgery and other forms of body
modification, see: Bagemihl, Bruce. (1997) "Surrogate Phonology
and Transsexual Faggotry: A Linguistic Analogy for Uncoupling Sexual
Orientation from Gender Identity." 1997, in Anna Livia and Kira
Hall (eds.), *Queerly Phrased: Language, Gender, and Sexuality*,
pp. 380 - 401. Oxford University Press, New York. Cromwell, Jason.
*Transmen and FTMs: Identities, Bodies, Genders, and Sexualities*.
University of Illinois Press, Urbana. 1999
<20> Carse, James P. *Finite and Infinite
Games*, p. 148. Ballantine Books, New York. 1986 Bey, Hakim. *Immediatism*,
pp. 30, 53 - 55. AK press. Edinburgh and San Francisco. 1994
<21> See Bagemihl, *Biological Exuberance*,
esp. pp. 252 - 55, for further development of the idea that procreation
is already a biologically "superfluous" component of sexuality,
i.e. merely a by-product or incidental effect of other forces.
<22> Kureishi, Hanif. *Sammy and Rosie
Get Laid*, p. 33. Penguin, New York. 1988
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