Literature DB >> 24322714

It is as it does: genital form and function in sex reassignment surgery.

Eric D Plemons1.   

Abstract

Surgeons who perform sex reassignment surgeries (SRS) define their goals and evaluate their outcomes in terms of two kinds of results: aesthetic and functional. Since the neogenitals fashioned through sex reassignment surgeries do not enable reproductive function, surgeons must determine what the function of the genitals is or ought to be. A review of surgical literature demonstrates that questions of what constitute genital form and function, while putatively answered in the operating room, are not answerable in the discourses of clinical evaluation used to define them. When the genitals--the word itself derived from the Latin genitas meaning to beget--are not reproductive, the question of their function shifts away from the biological and into other registers: pleasure, intimacy, sociality. As condensed sites of meaning and meaning-making around which selves, affects, resources, anxieties and futures are organized, the genitals signify in excess of the categories of "aesthetic" and "function" that surgeons use to assess them. Not reducible to either aesthetics or function, but constitutive of them both, this excess appears in surgical texts in the form of imagined futures of social and sexual engagement and demonstrates a powerful means by which properly sexed bodies are created.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2014        PMID: 24322714     DOI: 10.1007/s10912-013-9267-z

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Med Humanit        ISSN: 1041-3545


  27 in total

Review 1.  Transsexualism: a review of etiology, diagnosis and treatment.

Authors:  P T Cohen-Kettenis; L J Gooren
Journal:  J Psychosom Res       Date:  1999-04       Impact factor: 3.006

2.  Donor-site morbidity of the radial forearm free flap after 125 phalloplasties in gender identity disorder.

Authors:  Gennaro Selvaggi; Stan Monstrey; Piet Hoebeke; Peter Ceulemans; Koen Van Landuyt; Moustapha Hamdi; Bowman Cameron; Phillip Blondeel
Journal:  Plast Reconstr Surg       Date:  2006-10       Impact factor: 4.730

Review 3.  Development of feminizing genitoplasty for gender dysphoria.

Authors:  Jonathan Charles Goddard; Richard M Vickery; Tim R Terry
Journal:  J Sex Med       Date:  2007-04-19       Impact factor: 3.802

4.  New concepts in phallic reconstruction.

Authors:  D A Gilbert; C E Horton; J K Terzis; C J Devine; B H Winslow; P C Devine
Journal:  Ann Plast Surg       Date:  1987-02       Impact factor: 1.539

5.  Analysis of 136 cases of reconstructed penis using various methods.

Authors:  K X Cheng; W Y Hwang; A E Eid; S L Wang; T S Chang; K D Fu
Journal:  Plast Reconstr Surg       Date:  1995-05       Impact factor: 4.730

6.  Experience with the 1-stage surgical approach for constructing female genitalia in male transsexuals.

Authors:  T R Malloy; R B Noone; A J Morgan
Journal:  J Urol       Date:  1976-09       Impact factor: 7.450

7.  Phalloplasty in female-to-male transsexuals using free radial osteocutaneous flap: a series of 22 cases.

Authors:  R H Fang; Y S Kao; S Ma; J T Lin
Journal:  Br J Plast Surg       Date:  1999-04

8.  Penile reconstruction: is the radial forearm flap really the standard technique?

Authors:  Stan Monstrey; Piet Hoebeke; Gennaro Selvaggi; Peter Ceulemans; Koen Van Landuyt; Phillip Blondeel; Moustapha Hamdi; Nathalie Roche; Steven Weyers; Griet De Cuypere
Journal:  Plast Reconstr Surg       Date:  2009-08       Impact factor: 4.730

9.  Long-term outcome of forearm flee-flap phalloplasty in the treatment of transsexualism.

Authors:  Albert Leriche; Marc-Olivier Timsit; Nicolas Morel-Journel; André Bouillot; Diala Dembele; Alain Ruffion
Journal:  BJU Int       Date:  2008-01-08       Impact factor: 5.588

10.  Phalloplasty in female-to-male transsexuals: what do our patients ask for?

Authors:  J J Hage; C A Bout; J J Bloem; J A Megens
Journal:  Ann Plast Surg       Date:  1993-04       Impact factor: 1.539

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