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Feminist Theory
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Dualisms and female bodies in representations of African female circumcision

A feminist critique

Wairimu Ngaruiya Njambi

Florida Atlantic University, wnjambi{at}fau.edu

The contentious topic of female circumcision brings together medical science, women’s health activism, media, and national and international policy-making in pursuit of the common goal of eradicating such practices. Referring to these diverse and heterogeneous practices as ‘female genital mutilation’ (FGM), eradicators have then condemned them as ‘barbaric’ and medically harmful to female bodies and sexuality. In presuming that bodies can be separated from their cultural contexts, the anti-FGM discourse not only replicates a nature/culture dualism that has been roundly questioned by feminists in science studies and cultural studies, but has also perpetuated a colonialist assumption by universalizing a particular western image of a ‘normal’ body and sexuality in its quest to liberate women and girls. I use my own story as a circumcised woman to highlight the entanglements of body and culture as presented in these feminist theories of female bodies.

Key Words: anti-FGM discourse • female bodies • female circumcision • feminist science studies • irua ria atumia

Feminist Theory, Vol. 5, No. 3, 281-303 (2004)
DOI: 10.1177/1464700104040811


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