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‘It’s Only a Tradition’: Making Sense of Eradication Interventions and the Persistence of Female ‘Circumcision’ within a Swedish Context
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Citations
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References
2004
Year
Tradition ’Somali ImmigrantsEducationQueer TheorySocial SciencesSexual CulturesGender IdentityGender StudiesFeminist IdentityFeminist HealthFemale Sexual SlaverySexual And Reproductive HealthSomali PeopleFemale CircumcisionIntersectionalitySexual RightFemale Genital CuttingFeminist TheoryDiaspora StudySwedish ContextFeminist PhilosophyEradication InterventionsSexuality StudiesAnthropology
This paper questions why female circumcision (FC) persists despite eradication interventions and the migration of people to non-practising countries and discusses the reasoning of Somali immigrants on female circumcision. It is based on interviews with diverse groups and individuals in the Somali community, mostly refugees in Sweden. Paradoxes implying denial and avoidance emerged. Female circumcision was described, as just ‘a tradition’ that has little to do with Islam. The fear of bringing up an uncircumcised daughter in the liberal sexual morality of Sweden was mentioned as a dilemma. Circumcised women said the health care they received during pregnancy and childbirth was poor while the law failed to take account of the experiences of the Somali people. We conclude that rather than eradication, interventions seem to have silenced and stigmatized the practice due to their failure to take account of its meanings, organization and contexts, including the diasporic dynamics within which immigrants negotiate identities.
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