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Beans Velocci, "Sex Isn't Real: The Invention of an Incoherent Binary" (Duke UP, 2026)

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Apr 11, 2026
Beans Velocci, Assistant Professor at UPenn and author of Sex Isn’t Real, traces how scientific practices made sex seem binary. They walk through historical research in zoology, eugenics, gynecology, statistics, and trans medicine. Short, clear vignettes reveal how methods and institutions kept reshaping categories to fit prevailing social aims.
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ANECDOTE

Personal Origin Story Driving the Research

  • Beans Velocci discovered their own transness after reading Foucault as an undergrad and realizing gender norms were constructed.
  • That personal realization anchored the book: they later returned to archives despite emotional difficulty because the topic felt politically and personally vital.
INSIGHT

Sex's Power Comes From Its Flexible Definitions

  • Sex gained power not from fixed criteria but because it was allowed to mean multiple, often contradictory things.
  • Researchers repeatedly reclassified bodies and shifted what counted as sex so scientific authority could justify social order.
INSIGHT

Sex Science Fueled Racial Hierarchies

  • Scientists used sexual characteristics to racialize peoples, claiming more sexual dimorphism signaled 'evolutionary' advancement.
  • Example: Tabloch Ellis's pelvis diagrams compared European and Andamanese women to argue racial hierarchy.
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