Provincializing the clitoris

Jeanette Edwards, Michael Thompson

Research output: Chapter in Book/Conference proceedingChapterpeer-review

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Abstract

This contribution aims to broaden and nuance contemporary discussions of female genital mutilation/cutting and female genital cosmetic surgery (FGCS). In particular, we seek to reinvigorate debate which has tended to quickly default to a somewhat limited comparison of practices. We do so by shifting the analytical focus from practices, to one of the key entities in the comparison; that is, the clitoris. In focusing on the clitoris, we locate it in its historical and cultural specificity – including distinct sites of knowledge production - and thus ‘provincialize’ it. To do so, we track it across different domains of knowledge: starting with medicine, law, and feminism. These are domains in which the clitoris accrues specific meanings and where it is mobilized to underline distinctive truth claims. We add a fourth domain - ethnography - and draw on ethnographic examples to situate the clitoris in contexts that are usually absent from the production of medical and legal knowledge in the UK. In the final section we turn to FGCS. We draw on these four domains to address responses to FGCS which, we argue, have been shaped by these earlier narratives. In tracking the clitoris across these fields our aim is to unsettle both current modes of thinking and the medico-legal alliance where law and biomedicine each accept, often unexamined, the truth claims of the other.
Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationResearch Handbook on Socio-Legal Studies of Medicine and Health
EditorsMarie-Andree Jacobs, Anna Kirkland
PublisherEdward Elgar
Chapter7
Pages110-132
Number of pages23
ISBN (Electronic)9781786437983
ISBN (Print)9781786437976
Publication statusPublished - 4 Sept 2020

Publication series

NameResearch Handbooks in Law and Society series
PublisherEdward Elgar

Keywords

  • female genital cutting
  • female genital cosmetic surgery
  • feminism
  • ethnography
  • anthropological theory
  • medico-legal alliance

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