%0 Journal Article %T El TERCER G¨¦NERO DE LOS BINNIZ¨¢ ENTRE GLOBALIZACI¨®N Y ETNICIDAD: £¿Identidades hibridas? %A Stefanie Graul %J ODEERE ¨C Revista do Programa de P¨®s-Gradua£¿£¿o em Rela£¿£¿es ¨¦tnicas e Contemporaneidade %P 49-63 %@ 2525-4715 %D 2019 %R 10.22481/odeere.v4i7.4963 %X The influence of western lesbian, gay, bisexual, transsexual (LGBT) movements and the Mexican mass media is changing the role and habitus of the third gender of the Isthmus Zapotecs (Binniz¨¢), an indigenous people in southern Mexico. The author examines in a first step the traditional social function of this institutionalized homosexuality and the socialized constitution of the muxe¡® identity in the preoedipal and oedipal phases. Subsequently the traditional, often intergenerational homoerotic relationships between the Binniz¨¢ are analyzed and compared to the early Oedipus myth. Finally, the hybridized changes of the traditional social role of the muxe¡® are discussed, which lead to growing self-determination and at the same time to increasing marginalization, especially of the semitranssexual muxe¡®. These changes may eventually cause both: an equalization of gender roles and an increase in the existing tensions between the three genders. Additionally forms of traditional and western homosexuality are going to coexist, intertwine and form new patterns. %K muxe¡® %K homosexuality %K hybridization %K self-determination %K marginalization. %U http://periodicos2.uesb.br/index.php/odeere/article/view/4963