|
Showing 1 - 2 of
2 matches in All Departments
The last three decades have witnessed a proliferation of
nongovernmental organizations engaging in new campaigns to end the
practice of female genital cutting across Africa. These campaigns
have in turn spurred new institutions, discourses, and political
projects, bringing about unexpected social transformations, both
intended and unintended. Consequently, cutting is waning across the
continent. At the same time, these endings are misrecognized and
disavowed by public and scholarly discourses across the political
spectrum. What does it mean to say that while cutting is ending,
the Western discourse surrounding it is on the rise? And what kind
of a feminist anthropology is needed in such a moment? The Twilight
of Cutting examines these and other questions from the vantage
point of Ghanaian feminist and reproductive health NGOs that have
organized campaigns against cutting for over thirty years. The book
looks at these NGOs not as solutions but as sites of
"problematization." The purpose of understanding these Ghanaian
campaigns, their transnational and regional encounters, and the
forms of governmentality they produce is not to charge them with
providing answers to the question, how do we end cutting? Instead,
it is to account for their work, their historicity, the life worlds
and subjectivities they engender, and the modes of reflection,
imminent critique, and opposition they set in motion.
The last three decades have witnessed a proliferation of
nongovernmental organizations engaging in new campaigns to end the
practice of female genital cutting across Africa. These campaigns
have in turn spurred new institutions, discourses, and political
projects, bringing about unexpected social transformations, both
intended and unintended. Consequently, cutting is waning across the
continent. At the same time, these endings are misrecognized and
disavowed by public and scholarly discourses across the political
spectrum. What does it mean to say that while cutting is ending,
the Western discourse surrounding it is on the rise? And what kind
of a feminist anthropology is needed in such a moment? The Twilight
of Cutting examines these and other questions from the vantage
point of Ghanaian feminist and reproductive health NGOs that have
organized campaigns against cutting for over thirty years. The book
looks at these NGOs not as solutions but as sites of
"problematization." The purpose of understanding these Ghanaian
campaigns, their transnational and regional encounters, and the
forms of governmentality they produce is not to charge them with
providing answers to the question, how do we end cutting? Instead,
it is to account for their work, their historicity, the life worlds
and subjectivities they engender, and the modes of reflection,
imminent critique, and opposition they set in motion.
|
|