- Lhamana
"Lhamana" is the traditional
Zuni gender role , now described variously as mixed-gender orTwo-Spirit , for men who lived in part as women, wearing a mixture of women's and men's clothing and doing a great deal of women's work as well as serving as mediators. The most famous lhamana wasWe'wha .Gilley (2006, p.8), as is common after Roscoe (1991, p.22-28), describes lhamana as a third gender, "occupied by a male-bodied person" who "dressed as women and performed women's crafts [in Zuni culture
In contrast with European culture knitting, for example, was a male craft. ] such asweaving andpotting , but also had the physical strength to fulfill certain male-orientated pursuits such as hunting big game and cutting firewood."Though seen by European colonialists as
gay ortransgender , the Zuni lhamana played a significant role in the community that cannot be reduced to same-sex desire orcross dressing . Functions fulfilled by lhamana individuals in Zuni society include mediation, skill in crafts, and the knowledge necessary for instructing others. The lack of homophobia in traditional Zuni culture marks a further difference between the lhamana role and contemporary Euro-American gender and sexual identities. European terms used to describe lhamana include berdache, third gender, mixed gender, and man-woman.ources
*Gilley, Brian Joseph (2006). "Becoming Two-Spirit: Gay Identity and Social Acceptance in Indian Country". ISBN 0803271263.
*Roscoe, Will (1991). "The Zuni Man-Woman". ISBN 0826312535.
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