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Sometimes people try to destroy you, precisely because they recognize your power- not because they don't see it, but because they see it and they don't want it to exist. - bell hooks
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Article
Hombres Mujeres: An Indigenous Third Gender
Alfredo Mirandé1
Abstract This article interrogates West and Zimmerman’s Doing Gender paradigm by examining the Muxes of Juchitán, a little known third gender in El Istmo de Tehuantepec, Oaxaca México. After presenting preliminary findings based on per- sonal interviews with forty-two muxes and forty-eight community members, dis- tinguishing between muxes and gays and describing the wide variation in the muxe lifestyle, the essay concludes that muxes are a third sex/gender category that is actively redoing the prevailing Western gender binary as well as traditional Mexican conceptions of gender and sexuality. They are an indigenous third sex/gender category, which is less about Western conceptions of sexuality, sexual identity, or doing transgender and more about retaining the language, cultural categories, practices, and worldviews of indigenous communities.
Keywords muxe, Zapotec, two-spirit, third gender
This essay presents findings from an ethnographic study of the Muxes of Juchitán to
extend the debate engendered by West and Zimmerman’s (1987, 2009) Doing Gen-
der, which attempted to explain how gender is created and reproduced in society.
The muxes (pronounced ‘‘Moo-shey’’), an understudied indigenous group in El
Istmo de Tehuantepec, Oaxaca México, have been described as a third sex/gender
1 Department of Sociology, University of California, Riverside, CA, USA
Corresponding Author:
Alfredo Mirandé, Department of Sociology, University of California, 1219 Watkins Hall, 900 University
Ave., Riverside, CA 92521, USA.
Email: [email protected]
Men and Masculinities 2016, Vol. 19(4) 384-409
ª The Author(s) 2015 Reprints and permission:
sagepub.com/journalsPermissions.nav DOI: 10.1177/1097184X15602746
jmm.sagepub.com
category (Bennholdt-Thomsen 1997, 283) analogous to the institutionalized third
gender found among some Native American groups (Whitehead 1981; Williams
1986), the hijras of India and South Asia (Reddy 2005), and Moana values and
worldviews expressed by certain Pacific Islander groups, including the Tongan
Leiti, the Samoan Fa’afaine, and the Mahu in Tahiti and French Polynesia; biolo-
gical males who manifest feminine identities in a number of ways (Halapua 2006,
26).
Muxes are biological males who also manifest feminine identities in their dress
and attire, but they are not transsexual nor are they seeking to become women. They
both self-identify and are generally recognized and accepted as a third gender, rather
than as men or women, adopting characteristics of each gender. While lacking the
religious significance associated with Two-Spirit indigenous persons, hijras, and the
aforementioned Pacific Islander groups, muxes may have had such significance in
pre-Colombian times (Chiñas 2002, 109; Lacey 2008; Williams 1986, 135).
Nearly three decades after West and Zimmerman’s article first appeared, doing
gender theory has been so widely accepted that it may have reached a canonical
or law-like status (Jurik and Simen 2009). In fact, some argue that it ‘‘has become
the hegemonic theoretical framework for understanding gender’’ (C. Connell
2010, 31) and the ‘‘point of reference for Anglophone gender analysis’’ (R. Connell
2009, 105).
This essay seeks both to expound and expand on the doing gender debate by pro-
posing that, like Two-Spirit native people, muxes are a unique group of indigenous
men who upend conventional conceptions of sex category, gender, sexuality, and the
gender binary by openly dressing in female Zapotec attire and assuming traditional
feminine roles while being accepted and well integrated into the larger Zapotec com-
munity. Muxes also take us beyond the conventional gay/straight, object choice
Western binary in that their sexual partners are not other muxes or gay men but hom-
bres. I also seek to place these findings in a global indigenous context and suggest
that muxes are a third sex/gender category that cannot be understood by traditional
conceptions of gender and sexuality like those articulated by West and Zimmerman
(1987), Butler (1990, 2004), Lorber (2005, 2006), and other doing gender scholars or
within the rapidly emerging field of transgender studies (see Stryker 2008, 2013;
Valentine 2007).
After presenting a brief overview of the doing gender in the workplace literature,
the essay begins by discussing the increased recognition of Two-Spirit persons
among indigenous communities in North America, and attempts to link the literature
on the muxes to this movement. After discussing the methods and sample employed
in the study, I then present the major findings, focusing on the primary muxe orga-
nization, Las Auténticas Intrépidas Buscadoras del Peligro (Las Intrépidas) and the
great Intrépida Vela (community festival and dance). I conclude by discussing how
sexuality and gender are defined and manifested in Juchitán and profile a wide range
and variation in the muxe lifestyle and experience.
Mirandé 385
The essay concludes by placing these preliminary findings in a global indigenous
context that challenges West and Zimmerman’s (2009) assertion that it is impossible
to ‘‘undo gender’’ and suggesting that muxes are a third sex/gender category that is
actively redoing the prevailing Western gender binary as well as traditional Mexican
conceptions of gender and sexuality. In the end, I argue that muxes are an indigenous
third sex/gender category, which is less about sexuality, sexual identity, or doing
transgender and more about retaining the language, cultural categories, practices,
and worldviews of indigenous communities.
Doing Gender, Work, and the Muxes
Doing Gender in the Workplace: A Brief Overview of the Literature
West and Zimmerman first challenged the prevailing role theory model of gender
differences in 1987 by drawing on Garfinkel’s (1967) ethnomethodological case
study of Agnes, a preoperative transsexual raised as a boy who adopted a female
identity as a teenager. They proposed a distinct sociological understanding of gender
‘‘as a routine, methodical, and recurring accomplishment’’ and rather than viewing
gender as an internal property, they saw it as emergent from social situations and
external to the individual (West and Zimmerman 1987, 31).
In elaborating their theory, West and Zimmerman (1987, 2009) were careful to
distinguish among sex, sex category, and gender. Sex refers to socially constructed
biological criteria used in classifying individuals as female or male, such as genital
differences at birth or chromosomal differences. Persons are then placed in a sex
category through the application of these socially constructed indicators, but in
everyday life such classification is created and maintained ‘‘by socially required
identification displays that proclaim one’s membership in one or the other category’’
(West and Zimmerman 1987, 127). Although sex category presupposes one’s sex
and often serves as a proxy for sex, the two can and do vary independently, so that
like Agnes who had to preserve the secret of her penis and present herself to society
as a woman, one can declare membership in a sex category even when the socially
constructed sex criteria are absent (West and Zimmerman 1987, 2009).1 Gender, on
the other hand, entails the process of managing behavior according to normative
conceptions of appropriate attitudes and actions that are deemed to correspond to
one’s sex category. Such membership activities in turn develop from and reinforce
one’s sex category.
Critical works have started to focus not only on doing gender but on how one goes
about ‘‘undoing’’ and ‘‘redoing’’ gender by questioning the prevailing gender binary
and promoting social change (Butler 1990, 2004; Deutsch 2007; Risman 2009;
Lorber 2005, 2006). Lorber (2005), for example, uses the metaphor of ‘‘breaking the
bowls’’ and calls for a deliberate degendering of society in order to promote equality
and social change (2006).
386 Men and Masculinities 19(4)
Although the debate has been mostly theoretical (C. Connell 2010), an emerging
body of empirical work has looked at how transgender persons have attempted to
undo the heteronormative binary model. Not surprisingly, some of this research has
examined the workplace experiences of transgender-identified individuals2 (C. Con-
nell 2010). Transgender persons are not only able to transcend conventional notions
about how one goes about doing gender in their daily interactions (Deutsch 2007;
Risman 2009) but also to alter and expand norms associated with gender (C. Connell
2010).
Drawing on an empirical analysis of nineteen in-depth interviews with transgen-
der persons, Catherine Connell, for example, reports how they negotiate and manage
gender interactions in the workplace in order to critique West and Zimmerman’s
notion of doing gender. Five of the nineteen transgender persons in C. Connell’s
study were described as doing gender in the same sense that others do gender on
a daily basis. Rather than coming out and challenging the gender binary by publicly
declaring their transgender status, they were quietly performing ‘‘stealth’’ in the
workplace, and coworkers did not identify them as transgender (C. Connell 2010).3
The remaining fourteen participants, on the other hand, were said to be undoing
or redoing gender or doing transgender because they were ‘‘out’’ and their cowor-
kers, friends, and family knew they were transgender. While these persons blended
masculine and feminine gender performances, they ‘‘often felt they were gender dis-
ciplined and/or reinterpreted according to conventional gender norms’’ (C. Connell
2010, 40).4 While many transgender persons believe that they are radically altering
the gender binary, most are in fact directly and indirectly supporting or reifying the
very system they are seeking to change (Gagné, Tewksbury, and McGaughey
1997),5 supporting West and Zimmerman’s (2009) assertion that it is impossible
to undo gender and that attempts to change and subvert the gender binary only work
to reinforce it.
Work, Sexuality, and Gender in Juchitán
Despite the obvious theoretical and practical significance of the emergent research
on doing and redoing gender in the workplace, it is not without limitations
(C. Connell 2010; Deutsch 2007; Risman 2009; Schilt 2006; Gagné, Tewksbury,
and McGaughey 1997; Rosenfeld 2009). One limitation, as noted, is that in
attempting to reconfigure sex and gender roles in the workplace, transgender per-
sons may inadvertently reinforce the gender binary and heteronormative system
that they are seeking to challenge. A second, related limitation is that such
research is based on the sex/gender binary, which tends to conflate sex, sex cate-
gory, and gender. In Juchitán, on the other hand, sex, sex category, and gender are
separate and somewhat independent entities. Muxes identify with lo femenino or
what is feminine and many dress in traditional female attire, but they are not gen-
erally seeking to be transgender, or to be accepted as women.
Mirandé 387
Regardless of their dress or appearance, they are recognized as muxe by the com-
munity and by gay identified men. Biinizia informed me that a number of muxes
have eschewed professions and occupations that would require them to adhere to
modern and rigid masculine and feminine forms of attire. Interestingly, muxes do
not seek to go stealth by dressing in Western female attire because as Intrépidas, they
in fact aspire to maintain their Zapotec dress, language, and customs. It should also
be noted that there is no traditional male Zapotec way of dressing. Men at the velas,
religiously inspired four-day festivals, are expected to wear black pants and a white
guayabera (a loose fitting tropical shirt), but this form of dress is found throughout
Mexico, although muxes often adorn these shirts with brightly colored flowers and
embroidery.
I argue that in Juchitán, sex, sex category, and gender are upended and do not
necessarily correspond. Ironically, acceptance of muxes as a third sex/gender
category may be facilitated, not only by a sharp division of sex roles but also by the
prevalence of gender equity in Isthmus Zapotec society (Chiñas 2002; Bennholdt-
Thomsen 1997). Juchitán is not a matriarchal society,6 but a matrifocal family
system which persists in the face of patriarchy, where both men and women have
important cultural and ritual roles and where women exercise a great deal of power
and autonomy economically, socially, and in the kinship system (Chiñas 2002;
Bennholdt-Thomsen 1997). Because women assume the role of merchants and tra-
ders in the market they also control family resources and are recognized as economic
heads of households.
El Mercado (the market) has been described as ‘‘The Heart of Juchitán’’
(Bennholdt-Thomsen 1997, 67) and is controlled by women. Juchitecas (Tecas) have
a reputation for being hard workers and interestingly, when a man works hard, he is
praised because ‘‘he knows how to work like a woman’’ (Bennholdt-Thomsen 1997,
281). A man who works hard is treated like a muxe and accepted in the market not
because he is a woman but because he works like one.
The idea of going stealth in the workplace is antithetical to muxe identity since
their workplace, or better yet, their work ethic, defines their identity. Like the
women of Juchitán, muxes are praised for being very hardworking. Even those who
do not dress in feminine attire are openly recognized as a third sex category and take
on the characteristics of each gender. They are seen as neither women nor as men but
like the Zuni Man/Woman or Hombres/Mujeres, as combining and incorporating
dimensions of each gender. When asked whether they identify as men or women,
muxes invariably responded that they are neither; they are muxe; a third gender that
combines male and female traits that belie the prevailing Western gender binary.
Muxes are therefore continuously not only doing but also redoing gender.
In an interesting reversal in Juchitán, lighter work associated with music,
poetry, and art is typically defined as men’s domain, whereas heavy work like
working in the market and preparing for velas is defined as women’s domain.
Intermediate activities like making decorations for the velas and fiestas do not
readily fit into one of these categories and are considered an appropriate realm
388 Men and Masculinities 19(4)
of work for muxes. They design, embroider, and make traditional feminine Zapotec
attire. Several of the persons interviewed like Mayté and Darina designed decorations,
huipiles (traditional dresses), and/or high fashion dresses, work that is valued and in
high demand.
Literature Review: Two-spirit Peoples and the Muxes of Juchitán
In the 1980s, the so-called Anthropology of the Berdache was criticized by Native
peoples in North America as gay, lesbian, and transgender indigenous anthropolo-
gists sought to ‘‘displace colonial knowledge by making Native knowledge the
methodological ground of research by and for Native peoples’’ (Morgensen 2011,
139; Lang 1998, 7). The emergence of Two-Spirit Identity represented a critique
of the Anthropology of the Berdache (Whitehead 1981) and of Western notions of
gender and sexuality (Driskill et al. 2011a). Will Roscoe’s book (1991), The Zuni
Man-Woman, for example, argued that the Zuni Llhamana represented a third gender
status which combined the work and traits of both men and women. The Lhamana
was ‘‘less about sexual identity and more about the cultural categories of indigenous
communities’’ (Driskill et al. 2011a, 12). The newer Two-Spirit or ‘‘Two-Spirited’’
term confronts the Anthropology of the Berdache and refers to gender constructions
and roles that occur in many native or indigenous communities outside the Western
gender binary as well as to Native people who are now reclaiming and redefining
these roles within their respective communities (Driskill et al. 2011b).
The muxes are also indigenous persons who speak Zapotec, lead very public lives
24/7, live within a society and culture which, like the Zuni man-woman, recognizes
the existence of an indigenous third sex/gender category that is neither male nor
female but muxe. While most muxes cross-dress and are called vestidas, some only
dress for the fiestas, yet there is no necessary relationship between being muxe and
cross-dressing.
While there is an extensive body of research on Juchitán and surrounding Isthmus
communities, most of this research has focused either on its rich history and legacy
of political resistance in the region (Campbell et al. 1993) or on the women of Juchi-
tán and the so-called Isthmus matriarchy (Bennholdt-Thomsen 1997). Juchitán is
perhaps best known as the home of, Coalición Obrera Campesina Estudiantil del
Istmo (COCEI) a radical leftist Worker–Peasant–Student indigenous coalition that
has dominated politics in the region for the last thirty years (Campbell, Bindford,
Bartolomé, and Barabas 1993, xviii).
The literature on the muxes is limited and has been conducted primarily by out-
siders. Beverly Newbold Chiñas (2002), for example, an American anthropologist,
studied The Isthmus Zapotecs and devoted a scant four pages near the end of her slim
book to the muxes. In the Preface to The Isthmus Zapotecs, Chiñas acknowledges
that she entered the field not only ‘‘uninvited, unannounced, and unexpected,’’ but
Mirandé 389
ultimately unwelcomed and a number of women in the market refused to answer her
questions (Newbold Chiñas 2002, xii).
A team of German anthropologists headed by Bennholdt-Thomsen (1997) simi-
larly focused mostly on women and the matriarchal nature of Zapotec society but
only the last chapter of their excellent book, Juchitán, la ciudad de las mujeres, is
devoted to the muxes. To date, the definitive work on the muxes was carried out
by the now deceased Italian anthropologist, Marinella Miano Borruso. Her out-of-
print Spanish language book, Hombre, mujer y muxe’: en el Istmo de Tehuantepec
(Miano Borruso 2002) presents the life history of a Zapotec woman from birth to
death. Another account is a short pamphlet, Las Otras Hijas de San Vicente pub-
lished in Oaxaca by a Juchiteco, Elı́ Valentı́n Bartolo Marcial in 2010.
Method and Sample
Preliminary field research in Juchitán was conducted on four separate occasions in
2009, 2011, 2013, and 2014 through participant observation, attendance at muxe
velas (festivals), and conducting open-ended interviews with a purposive sample
of muxes and a select group of community members. Many of the muxes inter-
viewed were directly or indirectly associated with a local muxe organization, Las
Auténticas Intrépidas Buscadoras del Peligro (The Authentic, Fearless Seekers of
Danger) which has been in existence for almost forty years. The longevity of the
Intrépida organization speaks to its public acceptance by the business community,
political leaders, and even the Catholic Church. Leaders of the organization proudly
proclaimed that members and associates of Las Intrépidas come from all walks of
life, including accountants, lawyers, teachers, politicians, and merchants.
The name Intrépidas is significant because it connotes that the group’s members
represent muxes who are authentic and fearless seekers of danger. Members are in
fact committed to taking on unpopular or controversial issues, including sex educa-
tion, safe sex, AIDS awareness, and the eradication of domestic violence. The name
Intrépida (fearless) also suggests that one is not going stealth or in the closet.
Although a Mexican national, bilingual and bicultural, and a heterosexual male, I
was an outsider who was neither Zapoteco nor muxe, and expected that it would be
difficult to gain access to members of the organization. I found muxes to be surpris-
ingly warm, inviting, eager to talk about, and share their experiences. My initial con-
tacts in Juchitán were made through social notables, a term employed by Wayne
Cornelius (1982) and by Cecilia Menjı́var (2000). A critical social notable was
Felina, the owner of a salon that bears her name and who is past president of Las
Intrépidas. Felina’s Estética is both a salon and a place where muxes congregate
daily. It became a place I frequented often, where I made contacts, and conducted
interviews with Intrépidas and community members. It was also a communication
center where people left messages or met with me for interviews. I also obtained
referrals from other persons I came into contact with like the staff at the hotel where
I stayed. Davı́d, a young trainer at a local gym where I worked out, provided a great
390 Men and Masculinities 19(4)
deal of information on Juchitán and community views on various issues, referred me
to one of the gay men whom I interviewed. Roque, a hair stylist, and Gabriel, a per-
son who sells computer networks, were other persons I befriended who also served
as social notables and greatly facilitated the research. I also attended a number of
local community events and activities hosted by Las Intrépidas, which yielded more
contacts and served as occasions for participant observation.
The study used a wide range of qualitative research methods, including archival
research, ethnographic field research, participant observation, and in-depth personal
interviews. Through these contacts, I was able to observe, engage in informal con-
versations, and conduct forty-two open-ended interviews with muxes at Felina’s
Hair Salon, the velas, restaurants, Intrépida basketball games, and other locales.
An additional forty-eight interviews were carried out with community members in
order to assess their views of muxes. These included ordinary citizens in Juchitán
and the surrounding communities as well as other social notables like two priests
at the San Vicente Ferrer Parish, the Assistant to the Municipal President, the Assis-
tant Director of the local Colegio Nacional de Educación Profesional Técnica (CON-
ALEP), (National School for Professional Technical Education), a government
supported vocational/trade high school, and a staff worker at Ama la vida (Gunaxhı́l
Guendanabani) an organization devoted to the prevention of HIV, which has been in
existence for twenty years. Finally, I conducted interviews with five self-described
gay men who were not muxe.
The interview schedule was open-ended, lasted approximately forty-five minutes,
and covered a broad range of topics, including where the person was born and grew up,
what their parents did for a living, when the person first realized he was muxe, how
their families responded to their sexual orientation and lifestyle, whether they were
teased, harassed, or bullied as children and adolescents, how muxes were distinct from
gay men, whether they were, or had been, in a stable relationship with a man, as well
as the accomplishments and challenges faced by Las Intrépidas as an organization and
their societal acceptance in the community at large. All interviews were conducted in
Spanish, audio-recorded, translated into English, and transcribed by the author.
Because many muxes have adopted feminized or artistic names, I generally use the
feminine pronoun when referring to persons like Biiniza or Felina who are vestidas
and clearly assume a feminized identity and persona and the masculine pronoun and
pseudonyms for those who have not adopted a feminine persona. Some muxes alter-
nate between the masculine and feminine pronoun. Kike, a well-known travesti,7 and
performance artist, for example, uses Kike in his daily life as a hair stylist and Kika
when he transforms into a woman. He even refers to himself in the third person as
La Kika. Muxes appear to use the pronoun ‘‘he’’ when referring to a person’s total per-
sona, including childhood, and ‘‘she’’ when referring to the current person as
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