{{short description|Sexual orientation to men/masculinity or women/femininity}} {{Redirect-distinguish|Ambiphilia|Amphibia}} {{Sexual orientation}} {{Transgender sidebar}} In behavioral science, '''androphilia''' and '''gynephilia''' are sexual orientations: Androphilia is sexual attraction to men or masculinity; gynephilia is sexual attraction to women or femininity.<ref name="schmidt2010" /> '''Ambiphilia''' describes the combination of both androphilia and gynephilia in a given individual, or bisexuality. The terms offer an alternative to a gender binary homosexual and heterosexual conceptualization of sexuality.<ref name="diamond2010">Diamond M (2010). Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity. In Weiner I. B., Craighead E. W. eds. The Corsini Encyclopedia of Psychology, Volume 4. p. 1578. John Wiley and Sons, {{ISBN|978-0-470-17023-6}}.</ref>
The terms are used for identifying a person's objects of attraction without attributing a sex assignment or gender identity to the person. They may be used when describing intersex, transgender, and non-binary people.<ref>Turban J., de Vries A. L. C., Zucker K. J., & Shadianloo S. (2018). [https://iacapap.org/_Resources/Persistent/e98a7ad9ab1d202adc53363a3f92871ad29fc104/H.3-GENDER-IDENTITY-Edition-2018-REVISED.pdf Transgender and Gender non-conforming Youth]. The International Association for Child and Adolescent Psychiatry and Allied Professions, p. 3. Accessed 31 August 2022.</ref>
==Historical use==
===Androphilia=== Magnus Hirschfeld, an early-20th century German sexologist and physician, divided homosexual men into four groups: paedophiles, who are most attracted to prepubescent youth, ephebophiles, who are most attracted to youths from puberty up to the early twenties; androphiles, who are most attracted to persons between the early twenties and fifty; and gerontophiles, who are most attracted to older men, up to senile old age.<ref>Hirschfeld M (1948). Sexual anomalies: the origins, nature and treatment of sexual disorders : a summary of the works of Magnus Hirschfeld. Emerson Books, {{OCLC|1041032404}}</ref><ref>Dynes W.R. & Donaldson S (1990). Encyclopedia of homosexuality, Volume 1. Garland Publishing, {{ISBN|978-0-8240-6544-7}}</ref> According to Karen Franklin, Hirschfeld considered ephebophilia "common and nonpathological, with ephebophiles and androphiles each making up about 45% of the homosexual population."<ref>Franklin K (2010). Hebephilia: quintessence of diagnostic pretextuality. ''Behavioral Sciences & the Law'', volume 28, issue 6, pp. 751–768, {{doi|10.1002/bsl.934}}, {{PMID|21110392}}</ref>
The terms ''androsexuality'' and ''androsexual'' are occasionally used as synonyms for this orientation.<ref name="Tucker">Tucker N (1995). Bisexual politics: theories, queries, and visions. Psychology Press, {{ISBN|978-1-56024-950-4}}</ref>
;Alternate uses in biology and medicine In biology, ''androphilic'' is sometimes used as a synonym for ''anthropophilic'', describing parasites who have a host preference for humans versus non-human animals.<ref name="covel">Covell G, Russell PF, Hendrik N (1953). Malaria terminology: Report of a drafting committee appointed by the World Health Organization. World Health Organization, {{ISBN|9241400137}}</ref>
''Androphilic'' is also sometimes used to describe certain proteins and androgen receptors.<ref name="calandra">Calandra RS, Podestá EJ, Rivarola MA, Blaquier JA (1974). Tissue androgens and androphilic proteins in rat epididymis during sexual development ''Steroids'', volume 24, issue 4, pp. 507-518 {{doi|10.1016/0039-128X(74)90132-9}}</ref>
===Gynephilia=== A version of the term appeared in Ancient Greek. In ''Idyll'' 8, line 60, Theocritus uses {{lang|grc-Latn|gynaikophilias}} ({{lang|grc|γυναικοφίλιας}}) as a euphemistic adjective to describe Zeus's lust for women.<ref name="cholmeley">Cholmeley RJ (1901). The idylls of Theocritus. G. Bell & Sons, p. 98</ref><ref name="rummel">Rummel, E (1996). Erasmud on Women. University of Toronto Press, p. 82, {{ISBN|978-0-8020-7808-7}}</ref><ref name="brown1979">Brown GW (1979). Depression: A sociologist's view. ''Trends in Neurosciences'', Volume 2, pp. 253–256 {{doi|10.1016/0166-2236(79)90099-7}}</ref>
Sigmund Freud used the term ''gynecophilic'' to describe his case study Dora.<ref name="kahane">Kahane C (2004). Freud and the passions of the voice. In O'Neill J (2004). ''Freud and the Passions.'' Penn State Press, {{ISBN|978-0-271-02564-3}}</ref> He also used the term in correspondence.<ref name="freud19080325">Freud, S (1908). [https://pep-web.org/browse/document/zbk.025.0006a?page=P0006 Letter from Sigmund Freud to Sándor Ferenczi], March 25 1908. Psychoanalytic Electronic Publishing. Accessed 31 August 2022. Quote: "I have often seen it so: a woman unsatisfied by a man naturally turns to a woman and tries to invest her long-suppressed gynecophilic component with libido."</ref>
The variant spelling ''gynophilia'' is also sometimes used.<ref name="Money1986">Money J (1986). Venuses Penuses: Sexology, Sexosophy, and Exigency Theory. Prometheus Books, {{ISBN|978-0-87975-327-6}}</ref>
Rarely, the terms ''gynesexuality'' and ''gynesexual'' have also been used as synonyms.<ref name="Chodorow">Chodorow N (1999). The Reproduction of Mothering: Psychoanalysis and the Sociology of Gender. University of California Press, {{ISBN|978-0-520-22155-0}}</ref>
==Sexual interest in adults== Following Hirschfeld, ''androphilia'' and ''gynephilia'' are sometimes used in taxonomies which specify sexual interests based on age ranges, which John Money called chronophilia. In such schemes, sexual attraction to adults is called teleiophilia<ref>Blanchard R, Barbaree HE, Bogaert AF, Dickey R, Klassen P, Kuban ME, & Zucker KJ (2000). Fraternal birth order and sexual orientation in paedophiles. ''Archives of Sexual Behavior'', volume 29, issue 5, pp. 463–478, {{doi|10.1023/A:1001943719964}}, {{PMID|10983250}}, {{s2cid|19755751}}</ref> or adultophilia.<ref name="feierman">Feierman JR (1992). Reply to Dickemann: The ethology of variant sexology. ''Human Nature'', volume 3, number 3, pp. 279–297, {{doi|10.1007/BF02692242}}, {{PMID|24222432}}</ref> In this context, ''androphilia'' and ''gynephilia'' are gendered variants meaning "attraction to adult males" and "attraction to adult females", respectively. Psychologist Dennis Howitt writes: <blockquote>Definition is primarily an issue of theory, not merely classification, since classification implies a theory, no matter how rudimentary. Freund ''et al.'' (1984) used Latinesque words to classify sexual attraction along the dimensions of sex and age:<br/> Gynephilia. Sexual interest in physically adult women<br/> Androphilia. Sexual interest in physically adult males<ref name="howitt1995">Howitt D (1995). Introducing the paedophile. In ''Paedophiles and sexual offences against children''. J. Wiley,{{isbn|9780471939399}}</ref></blockquote>
==Androphilia and gynephilia scales== The nine-item Gynephilia Scale was created to measure erotic interest in physically mature females, and the thirteen-item Androphilia Scale was created to measure erotic interest in physically mature males. The scales were developed by Kurt Freund and Betty Steiner in 1982.<ref name="freund1982">Freund K, Steiner BW, & Chan S (1982). Two types of cross-gender identity. ''Archives of Sexual Behavior'', volume 11, issue 1, pp. 49–64, {{doi|10.1007/bf01541365}}, {{PMID|7073469}}, {{s2cid|42131695}}</ref> They were later modified by Ray Blanchard in 1985, as the Modified Androphilia–Gynephilia Index (MAGI).<ref>Blanchard, R. (1985). Research Methods for the Typological Study of Gender Disorders in Males. In: Steiner, B.W. (eds) Gender Dysphoria. Perspectives in Sexuality. Springer, Boston, MA. {{doi|10.1007/978-1-4684-4784-2_8}}, {{s2cid|140817009}}</ref>
==Gender identity and expression== {{Update|section|date=July 2023}}
alt=|thumb|462x462px|Diagram showing relationships of sex (X axis) and sexuality (Y axis). The homosexual/heterosexual matrix lies within the androphilic/gynephilic matrix, because homosexual/heterosexual terminology describes sex and sexual orientation simultaneously. This chart also shows how one's sexual attraction objective can be affected not by gender, but by masculinity and femininity. thumb|450px|right|Venn diagram showing relationships of sex and sexuality. Descriptors within a homosexual/heterosexual matrix are in white, to show differences in androphilic/gynephilic matrix.
Magnus Hirschfeld distinguished between gynephilic, bisexual, androphilic, asexual, and narcissistic or automonosexual gender-variant persons.<ref>Veale JF, Clarke DE, & Lomax TC (2008). Sexuality of male-to-female transsexuals. ''Archives of Sexual Behavior'', volume 37, issue 4, pp. 586-597, {{doi|10.1007/s10508-007-9306-9}}, {{PMID|18299976}}</ref><ref>Freund K, Heasman G, Racansky IG, & Glancy G (1984). Pedophilia and heterosexuality vs. homosexuality. ''Journal of Sex & Marital Therapy'', volume 10, issue 3, pp. 193-200, {{doi|10.1080/00926238408405945}}</ref> Since then,{{When|date=July 2023}} some psychologists have proposed using ''homosexual transsexual'' and ''heterosexual transsexual'' or ''non-homosexual transsexual.'' Psychobiologist James D. Weinrich has described this split among psychologists: "The mf transsexuals who are attracted to men (whom some call 'homosexual' and others call 'androphilic') are in the lower left-hand corner of the XY table, in order to line them up with the ordinary homosexual (androphilic) men in the lower right. Finally, there are the mf transsexuals who are attracted to women (whom some call heterosexual and others call gynephilic or lesbian)."<ref name="weinrich">Weinrich JD (1987). Sexual landscapes: why we are what we are, why we love whom we love. Scribner's, {{ISBN|978-0-684-18705-1}}</ref>{{Obsolete source|date=July 2023}}
The use of ''homosexual transsexual'' and related terms have been applied to transgender people since the middle of the 20th century,{{Citation needed|date=July 2023}} though concerns about the terms have been voiced since then. Harry Benjamin said in 1966: <blockquote>....it seems evident that the question "Is the transsexual homosexual?" must be answered "yes" and "no." "Yes," if his anatomy is considered; "no" if his psyche is given preference.
What would be the situation after corrective surgery has been performed and the sex anatomy now resembles that of a woman? Is the "new woman" still a homosexual man? "Yes," if pedantry and technicalities prevail. "No" if reason and common sense are applied and if the respective patient is treated as an individual and not as a rubber stamp.<ref name="benjamin1966">Benjamin H (1966). [https://web.archive.org/web/20090308045151/http://www.symposion.com/ijt/benjamin/ The transsexual phenomenon]. The Julian Press, Inc., {{isbn|9780446824262}}</ref></blockquote>
Many sources, including some supporters of the typology, criticize this choice of wording as confusing and degrading.{{Confusing|date=April 2023|reason=What choice of wording?}} Biologist Bruce Bagemihl writes "...the point of reference for "heterosexual" or "homosexual" orientation in this nomenclature is solely the individual's genetic sex prior to reassignment (see for example, Blanchard et al. 1987, Coleman and Bockting, 1988, Blanchard, 1989).<ref>Blanchard R (1988). Nonhomosexual gender dysphoria. ''Journal of Sex Research'', volume 24, pp. 188-193, {{doi|10.1080/00224498809551410}}</ref><ref>Coleman E & Bockting WO (1988). "Heterosexual" prior to sex reassignment—"homosexual" afterwards: A case study of a female-to-male transsexual. ''Journal of Psychology & Human Sexuality'', volume 1, issue 2, pp. 69–82, {{doi|10.1300/J056v01n01_11}}</ref><ref>Blanchard R (1989). [https://psycnet.apa.org/record/1990-07710-001 The concept of autogynephilia and the typology of male gender dysphoria]. ''Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease'', volume 177, issue 10, pp. 616–623, {{doi|10.1097/00005053-198910000-00004}}</ref> These labels thereby ignore the individual's personal sense of gender identity taking precedence over biological sex, rather than the other way around."<ref name="bagemihl">Bagemihl B (1997). Surrogate phonology and transsexual faggotry: A linguistic analogy for uncoupling sexual orientation from gender identity. In ''Queerly Phrased: Language, Gender, and Sexuality''. Livia A & Hall K (eds). Oxford University Press, p. 380 ff, {{isbn|0-19-510471-4}}</ref> Bagemihl goes on to take issue with the way this terminology makes it easy to claim transsexuals are really homosexual males seeking to escape from stigma.<ref name="bagemihl" /> Leavitt and Berger stated in 1990 that "The homosexual transsexual label is both confusing and controversial among males seeking sex reassignment.<ref name="leavitt1990">Leavitt F & Berger JC (1990). [https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/2260914/ Clinical patterns among male transsexual candidates with erotic interest in males.] ''Archives of Sexual Behavior'', volume 19, issue 5, pp. 491–505, {{doi|10.1007/BF02442350}}, {{PMID|2260914}}</ref><ref name="morgan1978">Morgan Jr AJ (1978). [https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/697564/ Psychotherapy for transsexual candidates screened out of surgery]. ''Archives of Sexual Behavior'', volume 7, pp. 273–282, {{doi|10.1007/BF01542035}}, {{PMID|697564}}</ref> Critics argue that the term "homosexual transsexual" is "heterosexist",<ref name="bagemihl" /> "archaic",<ref name="wahng">Wahng SJ (2004). Double Cross: Transamasculinity Asian American Gendering. In ''Trappings of Transhood''. In Aldama AJ (ed.) ''Violence and the Body: Race, Gender, and the State''. Indiana University Press, {{ISBN|0-253-34171-X}}</ref> and demeaning because it labels people by sex assigned at birth instead of their gender identity.<ref name="leiblum2000">Leiblum SR & Rosen RC (2000). Principles and Practice of Sex Therapy, third edition. Guilford Press of New York, p. c2000, {{ISBN|1-57230-574-6}}</ref> Benjamin, Leavitt, and Berger have all used the term in their own work.<ref name="benjamin1966" /><ref name="leavitt1990" /> Sexologist John Bancroft also recently expressed regret for having used this terminology, which was standard when he used it, to refer to transsexual women.<ref name="Bancroftcomment" /> He says that he now tries to choose his words more sensitively.<ref name="Bancroftcomment">Bancroft J (2008). Lust or Identity? ''Archives of Sexual Behavior'', volume 37, issue 3, pp. 426–428, {{doi|10.1007/s10508-008-9317-1}}, {{PMID|18431640}}, {{s2cid|33178427}}</ref> Sexologist Charles Allen Moser is likewise critical of the terminology.<ref name="moser2010">Moser C (2010). Blanchard's Autogynephilia Theory: A Critique. ''Journal of Homosexuality'', volume 57, edition 6, issue 6, pp. 790–809, {{doi|10.1080/00918369.2010.486241}}, {{PMID|20582803}}, {{s2cid|8765340}}</ref>
Use of ''androphilia'' and ''gynephilia'' was proposed and popularized by psychologist Ron Langevin in the 1980s.<ref name="langevin1983">Langevin R (1982). Sexual Strands: Understanding and Treating Sexual Anomalies in Men. Routledge, {{ISBN|978-0-89859-205-4}}</ref> Psychologist Stephen T. Wegener writes, "Langevin makes several concrete suggestions regarding the language used to describe sexual anomalies. For example, he proposes the terms ''gynephilic'' and ''androphilic'' to indicate the type of partner preferred regardless of an individual's gender identity or dress. Those who are writing and researching in this area would do well to adopt his clear and concise vocabulary."<ref name="wegener">Wegener ST (1984). Male sexual anomalies: the data (review of ''Sexual Strands'') ''APA Review of Books'', volume 29, issues 7–12, p. 783, Volume 29, Issues 7–12, p. 783.</ref>
Psychiatrist Anil Aggrawal explains why the terms are useful in a glossary: <blockquote>Androphilia – The romantic and/or sexual attraction to adult males. The term, along with gynephilia, is needed to overcome immense difficulties in characterizing the sexual orientation of trans men and trans women. For instance, it is difficult to decide whether a transman erotically attracted to males is a heterosexual female or a homosexual male; or a transwoman erotically attracted to females is a heterosexual male or a lesbian female. Any attempt to classify them may not only cause confusion but arouse offense among the affected subjects. In such cases, while defining sexual attraction, it is best to focus on the object of their attraction rather than on the sex or gender of the subject.<ref name="Aggrawal2008">Aggrawal A (2008). Forensic and medico-legal aspects of sexual crimes and unusual sexual practices. CRC Press, {{ISBN|978-1-4200-4308-2}}</ref></blockquote>
Sexologist Milton Diamond, who prefers the term ''gynecophilia'', writes, "The terms heterosexual, homosexual, and bisexual are better used as adjectives, not nouns, and are better applied to behaviors, not people." Diamond has encouraged using the terms androphilic, gynecophilic, and ambiphilic to describe the sexual-erotic partners one prefers (andro = male, gyneco = female, ambi = both, philic = to love). Such terms eliminate the need to specify the subject and focus instead on the desired partner. This usage is particularly advantageous when discussing the partners of transsexual or intersexed individuals. These newer terms also do not carry the social weight of the former ones."<ref name=diamond2010/>
Psychologist Rachel Ann Heath writes, "The terms homosexual and heterosexual are awkward, especially when the former is used with, or instead of, gay and lesbian. Alternatively, I use gynephilic and androphilic to refer to sexual preference for women and men, respectively. Gynephilic and androphilic derive from the Greek meaning love of a woman and love of a man respectively. So a gynephilic man is a man who likes women, that is, a heterosexual man, whereas an androphilic man is a man who likes men, that is, a gay man. For completeness, a lesbian is a gynephilic woman, a woman who likes other women. Gynephilic transsexed woman refers to a woman of transsexual background whose sexual preference is for women. Unless homosexual and heterosexual are more readily understood terms in a given context, this more precise terminology will be used throughout the book. Since homosexual, gay, and lesbian are often associated with bigotry and exclusion in many societies, the emphasis on sexual affiliation is both appropriate and socially just."<ref name="heath2006">Heath RA (2006). The Praeger handbook of transsexuality: Changing gender to match mindset. Greenwood Publishing Group, {{ISBN|978-0-275-99176-0}}</ref> Author Helen Boyd agrees, writing, "It would be much more accurate to define sexual orientation as either 'androphilic' (loving men) and 'gynephilic' (loving women) instead."<ref name="boyd2007">Boyd H (2007). She's not the man I married: My life with a transgender husband. Seal Press, p. 102, {{ISBN|978-1-58005-193-4}}</ref> Sociomedical scientist Rebecca Jordan-Young challenges researchers like Simon LeVay, J. Michael Bailey, and Martin Lalumiere, who she says "have completely failed to appreciate the implications of alternative ways of framing sexual orientation."<ref name="jordan-young">Jordan-Young RM (2010). Brain storm: the flaws in the science of sex differences. Harvard University Press, {{ISBN|978-0-674-05730-2}}</ref>
===Gender in non-Western cultures=== Some researchers advocate use of the terminology to avoid bias inherent in Western conceptualizations of human sexuality. Writing about the Samoan fa'afafine demographic, sociologist Johanna Schmidt writes:
<blockquote>Kris Poasa, Ray Blanchard and Kenneth Zucker (2004) also present an argument that suggests that fa'afafine fall under the rubric of 'transgenderal homosexuality', applying the same birth order equation to fa'afafine's families as have been used with 'homosexual transsexuals'. While no explicit causal relationship is offered, Poasa, Blanchard, and Zucker's use of the term 'homosexual transsexual' to refer to male-to-female transsexuals who are sexually oriented towards men draws an apparent link between sexual orientation and gender identity. This link is reinforced by mention of the fact that similar birth order equations have been found for 'homosexual men'. The possibility of sexual orientation towards (masculine) men emerging from (rather than causing) feminine gendered identities is not considered.<ref name="schmidt2010">Schmidt J. (2010). Migrating Genders: Westernisation, Migration, and Samoan Fa'afafine. Ashgate Publishing, Ltd., p. 45. {{ISBN|978-1-4094-0273-2}}.</ref></blockquote> Schmidt argues that in cultures where a third gender is recognized, a term like "homosexual transsexual" does not align with cultural categories.<ref name="schmidt2001">Schmidt J (2001). [http://wwwsshe.murdoch.edu.au/intersections/issue6/schmidt.html Redefining fa'afafine: Western discourses and the construction of transgenderism in Samoa.] ''Intersections: Gender, history and culture in the Asian context'', issue 6.</ref> She cites the work of Paul Vasey and Nancy Bartlett: "Vasey and Bartlett reveal the cultural specificity of concepts such as homosexuality, they continue to use the more 'scientific' (and thus presumably more 'objective') terminology of androphilia and gynephilia (sexual attraction to men or masculinity and women or femininity respectively) to understand the sexuality of fa'afafine and other Samoans."<ref name="schmidt2010" /> Researcher Sam Winter has presented a similar argument:
<blockquote>Terms such as 'homosexual' and heterosexual (and 'gay', 'lesbian', 'bisexual', etc.) are Western conceptions. Many Asians are unfamiliar with them, there being no easy translation into their native languages or sexological worldviews. However, I take the opportunity to put on record that I consider an androphilic transwoman (ie one sexually attracted to men) to be heterosexual because of her attraction to a member of another gender and a gynephilic transwoman (ie one attracted to women) as homosexual because she has a same-gender preference. My usage is contrary to much Western literature (particularly medical) which persists in referring to androphilic transwomen and gynephilic transman as homosexual (indeed as homosexual transsexual males and females, respectively).<ref name="winter">Winter S (2010). Lost in Transition: Transpeople, Transprejudice and Pathology in Asia. In Chan PCW (ed.) ''The Protection of Sexual Minorities Since Stonewall: Progress and Stalemate in Developed and Developing Countries.'' Routledge, {{ISBN|978-0-415-41850-8}}</ref></blockquote>
==See also== {{portal|Human sexuality|LGBTQ}} * Androgynophilia * Attraction to transgender people * Gender-blind * Index of human sexuality articles
==References== {{reflist|30em}}
===Bibliography=== * Hames RB, Garfield ZH, & Garfield MJ (2017). [https://digitalcommons.unl.edu/anthropologyfacpub/132/ Is Male Androphilia a Context-Dependent Cross-Cultural Universal?] ''Archives of Sexual Behavior'', volume 46, p. 132, {{doi|10.1007/s10508-016-0855-7}}
{{Sexual identities}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Androphilia And Gynephilia}} Category:Sexual orientation Category:Interpersonal attraction Category:Sexual orientations