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  1. The Hermaphrodite is an incomplete novel by Julia Ward Howe about an intersex individual raised as a male in the United States in the first half of the nineteenth century, who in adulthood lives sometimes as a female and sometimes as a male. Its date of composition is uncertain, but estimated to be between 1846 and 1847.

  2. A hermaphrodite (/ h ər ˈ m æ f r ə ˌ d aɪ t /) is a sexually reproducing organism that produces both male and female gametes. Animal species in which individuals are either male or female are gonochoric , which is the opposite of hermaphroditic.

  3. Hermaphroditus, the two-sexed child of Aphrodite and Hermes ( Venus and Mercury ), had long been a symbol of androgyny or effeminacy, and was portrayed in Greco-Roman art as a female figure with male genitals. [3] Theophrastus 's account also suggests a link between Hermaphroditus and the institution of marriage.

  4. Apr 27, 2017 · A hermaphrodite is an organism with both male and female genitalia. In sexually reproducing organisms, males have organs that produce male gametes, usually sperm. Females have different sexual organs that produce female gametes, usually called eggs.

  5. May 9, 2024 · Hermaphroditism, the condition of having both male and female reproductive organs. In humans, conditions that involve discrepancies between external genitalia and internal reproductive organs are described by the term ‘intersex.’. Learn about different forms of hermaphroditism and their treatment.

  6. Hermaphroditus, in Greek mythology, a being partly male, partly female. The idea of such a being originated in the East; in the Greek area it appeared in Cyprus, and, although it was a favourite subject in later Greek art, it was of no importance as a Greek cult. A legend of the Hellenistic period.

  7. As Bergland and Williams assert, The Hermaphrodite “forces us to reexamine what we thought we knew about the range of possibili-ties entertained by writers in Howe’s era concerning variations in sex, gender, and sexuality” as well as the possibilities in our own time (2).