ABSTRACT

This handbook looks at cross-cultural work on harmful cultural practices considered gendered forms of abuse of women. These include female genital mutilation (FGM), virginity testing, hymenoplasty, and genital cosmetic surgery.
Bringing together comparative perspectives, intersectionality, and interdisciplinarity, it uses feminist methodology and mixed methods, with ethnography of central importance, to provide holistic, grounded theorizing within a framework of transformative research. Taking female genital mutilation, a topical, contested practice, and making it a heuristic reference for related procedures makes the case for global action based on understanding the complexity of harmful cultural practices that are contextually differentiated and experienced in intersectional ways. But because this phenomenon is enshrouded in matters of sensitivity and prejudice, narratives of suffering are muted and even suppressed, are dismissed as indigenous ritual, or become ammunition for racist organizing. Such conflicted and often opaque debates obstruct clear vision of the scale of both problem and solution.

Divided into six parts:

• Discourses and Epistemological Fault Lines
• FGM and Related Patriarchal Inscriptions
• Gender and Genitalia
• Female Bodies and Body Politics: Economics, Law, Medicine, Public Health, and Human Rights
• Placing Engagement, Innovation, Impact, Care
• Words and Texts to Shatter Silence

Comprised of 24 newly written chapters from experts around the world, this book will be of interest to scholars and students of nursing, social work, and allied health more broadly, as well as sociology, gender studies, and postcolonial studies.

part I|88 pages

Discourses and Epistemological Fault Lines

chapter |2 pages

Reflections

chapter |1 pages

Reflections

chapter 3|22 pages

FGM/C and the Female Perpetrator

Analysis of an Underdeveloped Figure

chapter |2 pages

Reflections

chapter 4|19 pages

The Archaeology of Female Genital Mutilation in German National Politics

“We-Groups,” Othering, and the Pertinence of Intersecting Discourses “FGM and Femininity”

part II|52 pages

Female Genital Mutilations (FGMs) and Related Patriarchal Inscriptions

part III|62 pages

Gender and Genitalia

chapter 8|18 pages

Circumcision as Inscriptions of Gender

Implications of Eradication or Sustenance

chapter |3 pages

Reflection on Mary Nyangweso

chapter 9|15 pages

Patriarchal Inscription on African Women

Negotiating Zero Tolerance for FGM

part IV|126 pages

Female Bodies and Body Politics

chapter 12|15 pages

FGM Studies

Economics, Public Health, and Societal Well-Being

chapter |2 pages

Chapter 13 Reflections

chapter 14|16 pages

Reclaiming Autonomy of Body

Comparing Memoirs by Khady Koïta and Hibo Wardere

chapter 16|15 pages

FGM in One of the World's Richest Countries

The Case of Singapore

chapter |2 pages

Commentary

part V|80 pages

Placing Engagement, Innovation, Impact, Care

chapter |2 pages

Chapter 17 Commentary

part VI|80 pages

Words and Texts to Shatter Silence

chapter 21|23 pages

Voices to End Female Genital Mutilation/Cutting

Using Digital Storytelling to End a Harmful Social Norm

chapter 23|21 pages

“I'm Going to Be Judged for Having FGM”

National Health Service Experiences Described by Women Affected by Female Genital Mutilation in the United Kingdom and Europe

chapter |1 pages

Reflection by Dr. Owolabi Bjalkander on Chapter 23

“I'm Going to Be Judged for Having FGM”: National Health Service Experiences of FGM Survivors in the UK and Europe

chapter 24|19 pages

“This Is Not My Fatherland” – Female Genital Mutilation

Stories from the Lives of Nigerian Exiles in Italy