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Female Genital Cutting

Cultural Conflict in the Global Community

Elizabeth Heger Boyle

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The practice of female genital cutting, sometimes referred to as female circumcision and common in a number of African states, has attracted increasing attention in recent years and mobilized strong international opposition. While it typically produces a visceral response of horror and revulsion in Westerners, the practice is widely regarded in some cultures as essential for proper development into womanhood and is defended by women who have themselves experienced it and who have had the procedure performed on their own daughters. It is also perceived in many Islamic communities as religiously...

The practice of female genital cutting, sometimes referred to as female circumcision and common in a number of African states, has attracted increasing attention in recent years and mobilized strong international opposition. While it typically produces a visceral response of horror and revulsion in Westerners, the practice is widely regarded in some cultures as essential for proper development into womanhood and is defended by women who have themselves experienced it and who have had the procedure performed on their own daughters. It is also perceived in many Islamic communities as religiously prescribed, although most Islamic clerics do not condone the practice.

In this study, sociologist Elizabeth Boyle examines this controversial issue from the perspectives of the international system, governments, and individuals. Drawing on previous scholarship, records of international organizations, demographic surveys, and the popular media, Boyle examines how the issue is perceived and acted upon at international, national, and individual levels. Grounding her work in the sociological theory of neoinstitutionalism, Boyle describes how the choices made by governments and individual women are influenced by the often conflicting principles of individual human rights and sovereign autonomy. She concludes that while globalization may exacerbate such conflicts, it can ultimately lead to social change.

Reviews

Reviews

Brilliant and richly informative... This book deserves to become a standard text in courses on cultural globalization and the cultural politics of gender.

Boyle uses qualitative and quantitative data at the international, national, and individual levels to demonstrate the complexities and conflict around changing institutionalized cultural practices such as female genital cutting. In doing so, Boyle provides both an in-depth understanding of anti-female genital cutting efforts, and a unique multilevel approach to evaluating global cultural conflict.

Challenging and insightful. It raises many important questions in the perspectives of the international system, governments, and individuals.

Boyle has provided the reader with smart, complex, and sophisticated arguments about the contradictions and politics of global culture. I highly recommend it.

A strong sociological analysis of institutional interaction around a controversial issue.

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About

Book Details

Publication Date
Status
Available
Trim Size
6
x
9
Pages
208
ISBN
9780801882630
Illustration Description
30 b&w illus.
Table of Contents

Preface
Chapter 1. Introduction
Chapter 2. Understanding Female Genital Cutting
Chapter 3. The Evolution of Debates over Female Genital Cutting
Chapter 4. International Mobilization
Chapter 5. The

Preface
Chapter 1. Introduction
Chapter 2. Understanding Female Genital Cutting
Chapter 3. The Evolution of Debates over Female Genital Cutting
Chapter 4. International Mobilization
Chapter 5. The Diffusion of National Policies against Female Genital Cutting
Chapter 6. Variation in the Meanings of National Policies
Chapter 7. Individual Response: A Clash of Alternative Meaning Systems
Chapter 8. Individual Frame Resonance: Explanations for Opposing Female Genital Cutting
Chapter 9. Conclusion
Notes
References
Index

Author Bio
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Elizabeth Heger Boyle

Elizabeth Heger Boyle is an associate professor of sociology and law at the University of Minnesota.