(1) Because the publishing industry of the early and middle nineteenth century spurned female writers, Charlotte Bronte chose to work under the androgynous pseudonym Currier Bell.(2) That is, the alien becomes an androgynous , transsexual reflection of the individual who perceives/imagines it.(3) In my experience, opening up more androgynous views of males and females in the role of rescuer with young adults can enhance future discussion on this topic.(4) The films featuring Marlene Dietrich add the paradox of the dazzling yet androgynous female who is simultaneously moral and amoral, eminently proper yet irredeemably decadent.(5) Here, superimposed close-ups of Sieverding and Mettig, coming from three projectors, appeared to meld on one screen into the face of a single androgynous being.(6) They altogether seemed an androgynous and physically challenged group.(7) It was confirmed that the gender of Casey was indeed male, despite his androgynous and ever-youthful appearance.(8) Aquarians are known for their androgynous physique and from certain angles she appears to have the body of a man with broad shoulders, strong biceps and narrow hips.(9) Legalizing gay marriage will be one more step down the road to dissolving these dual binaries and creating a more androgynous (or perhaps just gender-free) world.(10) A celebrity in his own right for his androgynous appearance and interesting personality, his works are defined by uniquely loose and symmetrical patterns.(11) I looked around trying to catch a familiar face, finding them totally anonymous, androgynous , male and female blurring in the shadows.(12) The first human, it tells us, was really an androgynous being, both male and female in one body, sophisticated and self-sufficient.(13) The dummy was naked and androgynous , its body neither male or female.(14) He suspects that younger men brought up with more androgynous gender roles will score lower in normative male alexithymia, while older men raised in more traditional ways will score higher.(15) There's a scene in Patrice Chereau's Son Frere in which the hero confronts an androgynous youth wandering through a hospital corridor in agony over the operation he's about to undergo.(16) With her strong nose and thin, rangy frame, she's still androgynous , but her appearance, 30 years on, now has something of a ‘ragged glory’ aura.