Berdache methodology of early American conquest Introduction This article attempts to interpret gender and sexual behaviors as homosexual theory of cultural structural identity in relation to the existence of berdache in the new world at the time of Spanish conquest . Analyzing the gender and gender structure of indigenous peoples and comparing it with the Spanish ideology, in a sense I found a kind of conflict explaining the incompatibility of the two cultures.
Many Native American tribes have documented gender in the early 17th century. These tribal transgender people, originally known as the term Berdache, are blessed with skills as shamans, fortune tellers, or battlefield assets. But man, Berdache is not a preferred nomenclature. Please give me two. Unfortunately, in the era of westernization, the unhealthy number of such cultures was overwhelmed. But I think that culture is coming back. From the perspective of documentary and social movements, the two spiritual people finally regained their legacy.
Prior to contacting Western countries, many indigenous peoples played a third sexual role. These include "berdaches" (born in men, derogatory for those who are responsible for traditional women's role), "women who pass by" (women born with traditional male roles). The word bell dash is not European scorpion that covers various third party sex of various tribes rather than speaking American. Since the 1990s LGBT and indigenous activists have promoted the use of the term "double spirit" to represent native Americans with different gender. Not all Native American tribes traditionally recognize transgender people
Two spirituals or two spiritual terms are used to represent generations of generations and are members of the Native American (also known as American Indian, Aboriginal, Inuit, and Metis) community. It is an alternative to the earlier term "berdache" used by anthropologists studying these cultures (Lang, 1997, p. 100). Early anthropologists often misunderstood the mental factors of the two and explained it as an institutional form of homosexuals. As recent authors pointed out, becoming "back" is about carrier preferences and social roles rather than sex (page 101). The term "double spirit" is trying to create an English term that represents a concept different from the cultural concept of gender, western duality of men and women.