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Rethinking Female Genital Cutting through Postcolonial lens

Due to global instabilities, the resulting international displacement and rising inter- cultural tensions within Western societies have relocated gendered cultural practicesat the center of contemporary debates on multiculturalism, social cohesion and migration. In this context, female genital cutti...

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Main Author: Carvalho, Erika
Format: Thesis
Published: AUC Knowledge Fountain 2024
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access_status_str Open Access
author Carvalho, Erika
author_browse Carvalho, Erika
author_facet Carvalho, Erika
author_sort Carvalho, Erika
collection Thesis
description Due to global instabilities, the resulting international displacement and rising inter- cultural tensions within Western societies have relocated gendered cultural practicesat the center of contemporary debates on multiculturalism, social cohesion and migration. In this context, female genital cutting (FGC) has re-emerged as a symbol of savagery, portrayed as a symbol of “otherness”, a true global violation of women’s rights. While the increasing attention given to these practices is a testament to reinvigorated feminist activism, FGC has also been harnessed for the purposes of reproducing colonial discourses about the “Third World”, which have been integral to the revival of many policies and the creation of the “Fortress Europe”. This thesis aims to contribute to new knowledge by illuminating how cultural change and FGC-affected women’s experiences of trauma are shaped by state policies on asylum, migrant incorporation and cultural diversity. In locating inclusion, co-production and power as core issues in both anti-FGC activism and research in this area, I focused on an extensive literature review examining the different academic perspectives on conceptualizations of FGC, communities affected by it and the so called “strategies” for ending female genital cutting. This research focuses on reviewing the work of different authors as well as their theoretical contributions on FGC in the Global South, emphasizing the differences in between the cultural and structural perspectives, that define and divide the thinking from liberal feminists, black feminists and mainstream anti-FGC activism, postcolonial and socio-anthropological research. This thesis also looked into how these different debates continue to play out in approaches to FGC and other culturalized forms of gender-based violence in the Global North focusing also on illustrating the key gaps in relation to community perspectives on FGC prevention and the emergent positioning of the practice as an issue of migration and integration. By reflecting on the experiences behind migration, displacement and resettlement, this thesis focused on demonstrating the intersecting social, cultural, political and economic conditions which sustain women's continuums of violence before and after migration. The conclusion illustrates how the collision of anti-FGC and anti-immigration discourse creates barriers for women to rebuild their lives after violence and displacement. I highlighted how these discourses materialize to perpetuate further trauma and toconstrain women's spaces for action to challenge FGC and other forms of gender-based violence within their communities.
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institution American University in Cairo (Egypt)
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license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from AUC Knowledge Fountain — bepress
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spelling oai:fount.aucegypt.edu:etds-3304 Rethinking Female Genital Cutting through Postcolonial lens Carvalho, Erika Due to global instabilities, the resulting international displacement and rising inter- cultural tensions within Western societies have relocated gendered cultural practicesat the center of contemporary debates on multiculturalism, social cohesion and migration. In this context, female genital cutting (FGC) has re-emerged as a symbol of savagery, portrayed as a symbol of “otherness”, a true global violation of women’s rights. While the increasing attention given to these practices is a testament to reinvigorated feminist activism, FGC has also been harnessed for the purposes of reproducing colonial discourses about the “Third World”, which have been integral to the revival of many policies and the creation of the “Fortress Europe”. This thesis aims to contribute to new knowledge by illuminating how cultural change and FGC-affected women’s experiences of trauma are shaped by state policies on asylum, migrant incorporation and cultural diversity. In locating inclusion, co-production and power as core issues in both anti-FGC activism and research in this area, I focused on an extensive literature review examining the different academic perspectives on conceptualizations of FGC, communities affected by it and the so called “strategies” for ending female genital cutting. This research focuses on reviewing the work of different authors as well as their theoretical contributions on FGC in the Global South, emphasizing the differences in between the cultural and structural perspectives, that define and divide the thinking from liberal feminists, black feminists and mainstream anti-FGC activism, postcolonial and socio-anthropological research. This thesis also looked into how these different debates continue to play out in approaches to FGC and other culturalized forms of gender-based violence in the Global North focusing also on illustrating the key gaps in relation to community perspectives on FGC prevention and the emergent positioning of the practice as an issue of migration and integration. By reflecting on the experiences behind migration, displacement and resettlement, this thesis focused on demonstrating the intersecting social, cultural, political and economic conditions which sustain women's continuums of violence before and after migration. The conclusion illustrates how the collision of anti-FGC and anti-immigration discourse creates barriers for women to rebuild their lives after violence and displacement. I highlighted how these discourses materialize to perpetuate further trauma and toconstrain women's spaces for action to challenge FGC and other forms of gender-based violence within their communities. 2024-02-05T08:00:00Z thesis application/pdf https://fount.aucegypt.edu/etds/2262 https://fount.aucegypt.edu/context/etds/article/3304/viewcontent/Erika__Ferreira_Thesis_final___1_.pdf Theses and Dissertations AUC Knowledge Fountain Female Genital Cutting post colonial studies gender studies human rights migration Human Rights Law Law and Gender
spellingShingle Female Genital Cutting
post colonial studies
gender studies
human rights
migration
Human Rights Law
Law and Gender
Carvalho, Erika
Rethinking Female Genital Cutting through Postcolonial lens
title Rethinking Female Genital Cutting through Postcolonial lens
title_full Rethinking Female Genital Cutting through Postcolonial lens
title_fullStr Rethinking Female Genital Cutting through Postcolonial lens
title_full_unstemmed Rethinking Female Genital Cutting through Postcolonial lens
title_short Rethinking Female Genital Cutting through Postcolonial lens
title_sort rethinking female genital cutting through postcolonial lens
topic Female Genital Cutting
post colonial studies
gender studies
human rights
migration
Human Rights Law
Law and Gender
url https://fount.aucegypt.edu/etds/2262
https://fount.aucegypt.edu/context/etds/article/3304/viewcontent/Erika__Ferreira_Thesis_final___1_.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT carvalhoerika rethinkingfemalegenitalcuttingthroughpostcoloniallens