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An AIS Adult Writes to Greer

An adult woman with AIS wrote to Prof Greer with her experiences:

Dear Prof Greer

I must say that I am very disappointed that you have used half-baked and poorly researched ideas to make cheap sensationalistic points at the expense of a group of women--those with AIS, like me--who often have a hard enough time understanding their condition and living their lives in peace. And I am surprised your publishers have allowed such an ill-researched chapter to get published in an otherwise very interesting and well-written book. I would like to address some inaccuracies you make in your book. I include your text in italics.

I hope this letter addresses some of the inaccuracies in these few pages of your book. I find that, having studied molecular biology and the mechanisms of gene expression, insisting on chromosomal structure as the basis of sex determination is as simplistic a view of biology as the story of Adam and Eve. But then, I suppose any simplistic theory will have its adherents.

Thank you for reading this letter. I must say that I am a big fan of many of your ideas--and this is the reason I, and others, feel it is worthwhile to attempt reasoning with you. In your recent television programme, I was happy that you were promoting the view that sex is more than having, as you say, a cleft for penetration. I couldn't help thinking that any young AIS woman in your audience would have benefited very much from listening to you. I strongly agree with your view that being a woman is not contingent on being an ultra-feminine Barbie doll, but is more innate and visceral. I have never felt the need to subject myself to the torture of high-heels or eyebrow-shaping to validate myself as a woman. I suppose our disagreement is about the point at which genetics, biochemistry, and environment meet in defining womanhood. I feel, as an academic, that ideology must bow to biological reality.

I would very much have liked to offer to meet you sometime for further discussion; unfortunately, your name has been linked too often with the word "outing'' for me to be comfortable doing so. While my family and friends are perfectly accepting of my unusual route to womanhood, there are still many people with notions such as those you express who would rather be lazy and think of me as a kind of freak instead of understanding how nature made me into a "whole woman''. And I feel no need to be made vulnerable to such ignorance.

Regards,

[Name withheld ]


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