List of intersex people
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Intersex people are born with sex characteristics, such as genitals, gonads and chromosome patterns that, according to the UN Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights, "do not fit the typical definitions for male or female bodies".[1][2]
Intersex people have many different gender identities,[2] and so there is no presumption that people on this list have any particular sex assigned at birth, nor any particular gender identity.
This list consists of well-known intersex people. The individual listings note the subject's main occupation or source of notability.
Notable intersex people
[edit]A
[edit]- Carlett Brown Angianlee, Naval officer, considered likely to be the first African American to undergo SRS.
- Eden Atwood, U.S. jazz musician, actor, and an advocate for the civil rights of people born with intersex traits.
- Kitty Anderson, Icelandic intersex activist who regularly engages in advocacy/policy work and is the co-chair of OII Europe.[3][4]
B
[edit]- Karl M. Baer (1885–1956), German-Israeli author, social worker, suffragette and Zionist.[5]
- Nubia Barahona, a ten-year-old American girl murdered in 2011.
- Herculine Barbin, the 19th century memoirs of this French intersex person were published by Michel Foucault in 1980.[6] Barbin's birthday, November 8, is now observed as Intersex Day of Remembrance.
- Janik Bastien-Charlebois, Quebecois sociologist, researcher and activist.[7][8]
- Max Beck, U.S. activist and participant in the demonstration on October 26, 1996, that led to the establishment of Intersex Awareness Day.[9]
- Aleksander Berezkin (Russian: Александр Берёзкин), Russian intersex immigrants activist with Klinefelter syndrome.
- Maddie Blaustein, American voice actor and comic creator known for her roles as Meowth in Pokémon and E-123 Omega in the Sonic the Hedgehog series, content creator for Second Life.[10]
- Tony Briffa, Australian intersex and human rights activist; world's first out intersex Mayor and first publicly elected out intersex person.[11] Current co-executive director of Intersex Human Rights Australia, and Vice-President and former President of the Androgen Insensitivity Syndrome Support Group Australia.
- Alec Butler, Canadian playwright and filmmaker.
C
[edit]- Mauro Cabral, Argentinian intersex activist, writer, co-director of GATE
- Jeff Cagandahan, a Filipino intersex human rights activist at Intersex Asia who successful appealed for a change of name and gender on his birth certificate.[12]
- Lady Colin Campbell, UK author and socialite.
- Morgan Carpenter, Australian intersex activist who created the modern intersex flag which features a purple circle and yellow background, he is the co-executive director of Intersex Human Rights Australia.[13]
- Eleno de Céspedes, a 16th-century intersex person in Spain.
- Dutee Chand, Indian athlete who successfully challenged IAAF regulations preventing her from running.
- Cheryl Chase, also known as Bo Laurent, U.S. intersex activist and founder of the Intersex Society of North America.[14]
- Hiker Chiu, founder of Oii-Chinese.
- Caroline Cossey, English model.
- Cary Gabriel Costello, U.S. associate professor of sociology and advocate for transgender and intersex rights.
- Roberta Cowell, British racing driver and pilot.
- Roberta Close, a Brazilian fashion model, actress and television personality.
D
[edit]- Lisa Lee Dark, Welsh opera singer and voice actress.
- Georgiann Davis, U.S. sociology scholar and researcher on intersex issues.
- Vaginal Davis, U.S. genderqueer performing artist, painter, composer and writer.
- Fiore de Henriquez (1921–2004), Italian-British sculptor.
- Tiger Devore, U.S. clinical psychologist, educator on intersex issues since 1984, appears in the short film XXXY (2000).
- Foekje Dillema (1926–2007), Dutch track and field athlete.
- Arisleyda Dilone, U.S. Latina film director and actor.
- Betsy Driver, Mayor of Flemington, New Jersey; intersex activist and first intersex elected official in the United States.[15]
- Karl Dürrge (also known as Maria Dorothea Derrier: 1780–1835), Prussian intersex man and human subject in medical research.
E
[edit]- Lili Elbe (1882–1931), Danish painter; she was a transgender and intersex woman, and one of the earliest transgender women to receive sex reassignment surgery.
F
[edit]- Florian-Ayala Fauna, American artist, musician, and music producer.[16]
- Favorinus of Arelate (c. 80 – c. 160 AD), a Roman sophist and philosopher who flourished during the reign of Hadrian.
- Fernanda Fernández (1755–unknown), Spanish intersex person.
- Sir Ewan Forbes (1912–1991), UK noble, formerly Elizabeth Forbes-Sempill and 11th Baronet of Craigievar.
- Sara Forsberg (born 1994), Finnish singer, songwriter, and television presenter[17]
- Crystal Frasier, American artist and game designer, and also a trans woman.[18][19]
G
[edit]- River Gallo, Salvadoran-American filmmaker, actor, model, and intersex rights activist.
- Dan Christian Ghattas, German activist, historian and author of Human Rights between the Sexes, a first international comparative study of the human rights of intersex people and executive director of OII Europe.
- Gottlieb Göttlich (1798–unknown), German medical research subject.
- Seven Graham (born 1969), activist, comedian, filmmaker and playwright, and drug addiction counsellor.[20]
- Sarah Gronert, German tennis player.
- Sally Gross (1953–2014), South African intersex, anti-apartheid and Israel/Palestine human rights activist; secured first mention of intersex in anti-discrimination law.
H
[edit]- Thomas(ine) Hall, a person of indeterminate gender in 17th-century colonial Virginia.
- Bonnie Hart, Australian multi-disciplinary artist and president of the Androgen Insensitivity Syndrome Support Group Australia.
- Phoebe Hart, Australian filmmaker and director of Orchids, My Intersex Adventure, a 2010 auto-biographical documentary.
- Miriam van der Have, Dutch activist, co-chair of OII Europe and director of Nederlands Netwerk intersekse/DSD.[21][22]
- Francis Heaulme, a French serial killer with Klinefelter syndrome.
- Morgan Holmes, Canadian activist, professor of sociology and author of several books on intersex including Critical Intersex.[23]
- Juliana Huxtable. U.S. artist and writer.
J
[edit]- Natasha Jiménez, Costa Rican and Latin American intersex and trans activist.
- Alex Jürgen, Austrian intersex activist.
K
[edit]- Julius Kaggwa, award-winning Ugandan activist.
- John Kenley, pioneering U.S. theatrical producer.
- Stefan Kiszko, British man falsely imprisoned for the murder of Lesley Molseed.
- Ewa Kłobukowska, Polish sprinter.
- Emi Koyama, Japanese-American internist at Intersex Society of North America, co-founder of Intersex Awareness Day, and sex worker and trans feminist activist.
- Anton Kryzhanovsky (Russian: Антон Крыжановский), Russian intersex rights activist and sound designer, open about living with ovotestis.
- Irene Kuzemko (Russian: Ирина Куземко), Russian-Ukrainian intersex activist.
L
[edit]- Lê Văn Duyệt, Nguyen dynasty general and high-ranking mandarin in Vietnam.[24]
- Bobby Joe Long, a U.S. serial killer with Klinefelter syndrome.
- Ricardo López, a Uruguayan-American with Klinefelter syndrome who stalked and attempted to murder Icelandic singer Björk in 1996.
- Small Luk, intersex activist living in Hong Kong, founder of Beyond the Boundary – Knowing and Concerns Intersex[25]
M
[edit]- Gopi Shankar Madurai, Indian, one of the founding members of Srishti Madurai and Intersex Asia, also the first openly intersex and genderqueer person appointed in the public office with a position in par with Under Secretary to Government of India.[26][27][28][29] Ex-Hindu Monk.[30][31]
- Aprilio Manganang, an Indonesian volleyball player, reassigned male after retirement.
- Alex MacFarlane, first known holder of an Australian passport with an 'X' sex descriptor.
- Gabriel J. Martín, Spanish gay and intersex psychologist and author.
- Maria José Martínez-Patiño, a Spanish hurdler who was dismissed from competition in 1986 for failing a sex test.
- Santiago Mbanda Lima, the first publicly-visible intersex activist in Portugal.
- Sheena Metal, U.S. talk-show host.[32]
- Mani Mitchell, New Zealand intersex activist, researcher/presenter of the movie Intersexion.[33]
- Nthabiseng Mokoena, South African intersex activist.
- Iain Morland, British author and music technologist.
- Esther Morris Leidolf, U.S. activist and founder of MRKH Organization,[34] and author of The Missing Vagina Monologue.[35]
N
[edit]- Nancy Navalta, Filipino track and field athlete.
- Annet Negesa, Ugandan middle-distance runner.
- Maria Nikiforova, Ukrainian anarchist revolutionary.[36][37]
- Francine Niyonsaba, Burundian 800 metres runner.
O
[edit]- AJ Odasso, American author, editor, and poet.
- Hanne Gaby Odiele, Belgian model.[38]
- Sogto Ochirov, Russian intersex activist, archer and shepherd.[39]
P
[edit]- Pidgeon Pagonis, U.S. intersex artist and activist, nominated as a 2015 Whitehouse LGBT Champion of Change.[40]
- Dee Palmer, formerly David Palmer, English composer and keyboardist, best known for membership in Jethro Tull.
- Pinki Pramanik, Indian track athlete.
- Casimir Pulaski, Polish-American military commander thought to have an intersex trait.[disputed – discuss]
R
[edit]- Kristian Ranđelović, Serbian and Balkan intersex and transgender activist.
- Heinrich Ratjen (also known as Dora Ratjen) (1918–2008), German athlete.
- Jemma Redmond (1978–2016), Irish biotechnologist and innovator.
- Esan Regmi, Nepali intersex human rights activist.
- Veronique Renard, Dutch author and visual artist.
- Ana Roxanne, American musician and singer.
- Eliana Rubashkyn, Colombian, New Zealand pharmacist, activist and gender refugee.
- Mark Errin Rust, Australian serial sex murderer.
S
[edit]- Sa Bangji, Korean intersex person.
- Erik Schinegger, alpine skier.
- Scout Schultz, a student at the Georgia Institute of Technology, Georgia, U.S., who was shot dead by police on September 16, 2017.[41]
- Caster Semenya, South African 800 m Olympic gold medalist.[42]
- Edinanci Silva, Brazilian judoka and gold medalist in the woman's half-heavyweight division at the Pan-American games.[43]
- Dawn Langley Simmons (1937 or 1922 to 2000), English author and biographer.
- Jim Sinclair, autism rights activist.[44]
- Witold Smętek, Polish athlete and record holder.
- Salvador Sobral, Portuguese singer, who won the Eurovision Song Contest 2017 for Portugal.
- Georgina Somerset (née Turtle) (1923-2013), first openly intersex person in the UK; active in the media from the mid-1960s.[45]
- Anick Soni, award-winning British Asian intersex activist and Fellow of the Royal Society of Arts.
- Santhi Soundarajan, Indian athlete.[46]
- Pedro Spajari, Brazilian swimmer.
- Levi Suydam, 19th century U.S. intersex person.
T
[edit]- Bogi Takács, Hungarian poet and writer.
- Alexander (Alex) Thornton, U.S./Italian marine scientist, educator, and activist founder of Pride in Polar Research (PiPR).
V
[edit]- Hida Viloria, American queer, gender-fluid intersex writer, activist, and author of Born Both: An Intersex Life (Hachette Books); founding director of Intersex Campaign for Equality; appears in the films Gendernauts and Intersexion.
- Del LaGrace Volcano, U.S./Sweden, visual artist and speaker on queer and intersex issues (e.g. the Critical Sexology Seminars, London).[47]
- Christiane Völling, Germany, thought to be the first person to successfully sue in a case of medical treatment without consent.[48][49][50]
W
[edit]- Stanisława Walasiewicz, also known as Stella Walsh, a Polish Olympic athlete and medal winner in the 1930s.
- Sean Saifa Wall, African American intersex and anti-racist activist.[51]
- Margaret Wambui, Kenyan middle-distance runner.
- Mark Weston (1905–1978), UK field athlete.
- Gigi Raven Wilbur, U.S. bisexuality rights activist.[52]
- Gina Wilson, activist and founder president of Intersex Human Rights Australia.
X
[edit]- Xie Jianshun, Taiwanese soldier.
Z
[edit]- Reuben Zellman, U.S. intersex and transgender rabbi and musician.[53][54]
- Kimberly Zieselman, U.S. advocate, attorney, and executive director of interACT.[55]
- Dana Zzyym, U.S. non-binary intersex activist and Associate Director of Intersex Campaign for Equality. Zzyym is suing the U.S. State Department for a gender-neutral passport in Zzyym v. Pompeo.[56][57]
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ UN Committee against Torture; UN Committee on the Rights of the Child; UN Committee on the Rights of People with Disabilities; UN Subcommittee on Prevention of Torture and other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment; Juan Méndez, Special Rapporteur on torture and other cruel, inhuman, or degrading treatment or punishment; Dainius Pῡras, Special Rapporteur on the right of everyone to the enjoyment of the highest attainable standard of physical and mental health; Dubravka Šimonoviæ, Special Rapporteur on violence against women, its causes and consequences; Marta Santos Pais, Special Representative of the UN Secretary-General on Violence against Children; African Commission on Human and Peoples' Rights; Council of Europe Commissioner for Human Rights; Inter-American Commission on Human Rights (October 24, 2016), "Intersex Awareness Day – Wednesday 26 October. End violence and harmful medical practices on intersex children and adults, UN and regional experts urge", Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights, archived from the original on November 21, 2016
{{citation}}
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- ^ "Kitty Anderson". OII Europe. Archived from the original on 2016-12-21. Retrieved 2017-01-31.
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- ^ "Karl M. Baer: The first person in the world to undergo sex-change surgery". Pata Queens. June 10, 2020. Retrieved May 19, 2021.
- ^ Foucault, M. & Barbin, H. (1980) Herculine Barbin – Being the Recently Discovered Memoirs of a Nineteenth Century Hermaphrodite, New York, Random House.
- ^ Bastien-Charlebois, Janik (August 9, 2015). "My coming out: The lingering intersex taboo". Montreal Gazette. Archived from the original on August 27, 2016.
- ^ Valenza, Alessia (October 2015). "Sanctioned sex/ualities: The medical treatment of intersex bodies and voices". Archived from the original on 2016-10-11.
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