Literature DB >> 9373386

Female circumcision among Egyptian women.

K P Ericksen1.   

Abstract

Although a remarkable degree of consensus has been reached among international agencies, policymakers, and women's health advocates that the practice of female circumcision should be eliminated, such consensus is not necessarily shared by those who perform the operation or the families responsible for having girls excised. The surgical procedure is nested in a complex set of beliefs about identity, moral behavior, and the working of the female body. This article describes the dominant themes produced in 85 extensive interviews with mother and operators representing the broad spectrum of Egyptian society. The interviews detailed the operation itself, women's emotional response to the operation, and the rationales put forth in support of the practice. Although institutional efforts to eliminate the practice will meet with resistance, significant demographic shifts already taking place are producing changes in family systems and the opportunity structure that coincide with the abandonment of excision in key sectors of the urban population.

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Year:  1995        PMID: 9373386

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Womens Health        ISSN: 1077-2928


  1 in total

1.  Frequency-Dependent Social Transmission and the Interethnic Transfer of Female Genital Modification in the African Diaspora and Indigenous Populations of Colombia.

Authors:  Cody T Ross; Patricia Joyas Campiño; Bruce Winterhalder
Journal:  Hum Nat       Date:  2015-12
  1 in total

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