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Children's Genitals Under the Knife: Social Imperatives, Secrecy, and Shame

 
 
Children's Genitals Under the Knife: Social Imperatives, Secrecy, and Shame
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Children's Genitals Under the Knife: Social Imperatives, Secrecy, and Shame

The object of this book is to give voice to the multitudes of human beings who exist behind the statistics on genital surgery performed on them when they were non-consenting children, and who have long endured their suffering in silence, for reasons of suppression, desperation, or shame. I have endeavored to create an understanding of the connection between genital surgery perpetrated on infants and children too young to be capable of meaningful consent or effective protest, and of the frequently cataclysmic diminution in quality of life that they have suffered as a consequence. To anyone not totally steeped in denial, or tyrannized by social custom, as most people in genitally mutilating societies certainly tend to be, whether we are talking about female genital cutting, inter-sex surgery or male foreskin ablation, it should be perfectly obvious that genital cutting of any sort is the kind of nightmarish event that makes the most cruel reality of a child's ultimate fears.

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Product Details:
Author: Hanny Lightfoot-Klein
Paperback: 214 pages
Publisher: BookSurge Publishing
Publication Date: August 13, 2007
Language: English
ISBN: 1419625403
Package Length: 9.0 inches
Package Width: 6.0 inches
Package Height: 0.53 inches
Package Weight: 0.84 pounds
Average Customer Rating: based on 1 reviews
 
 

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Average Customer Review:5.0 ( 1 customer reviews )
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7 of 7 found the following review helpful:

5They do what?  Jan 23, 2010
By L. Wilson
This book has more than you want to know about the bizarre reasons that people mutilate children's genitals. However, we all need to know this information.

Ms. Lightfoot-Klein addresses the horrors of the issue of both male and female circumcision with sympathy for the cultures that practice them. However, she also is clearly opposed. She discusses not only what it means to various cultures, but also how we can begin to work to change the cultures without imposing laws on them or discarding the important parts of the culture (families, languages, arts, etc.). She also makes the point that in most cases, the parents are only trying to do the right thing for their children, but at least a few of the operators have really questionable motives.

Ms.L-K doesn't let the US off the hook, either. Not only is US one of the few countries that medicalized male circumcision, it is the only country that continues to do it even when there is no medical reason. Also, she points out that until a relatively few years ago, baby girls' clitorises were cut off if they were "too long"--Not in Africa, but in the US and until 1977 Blue Cross paid for it. Knowledgeable Africans see this tradition in America and wonder why many Americans are so eager to change the culture of Africa. It sounds a lot like European colonization, except this time it is the culture that is being colonized.

In many areas that practice female genital removal, there is now an attempt to medicalize the procedure. While this will save the lives of some girls, it will continue the practice much longer when local medical authorities are saying that it is a good thing for the girls. Like male circumcision in the US, the claim is made in the face of the facts, which are ignored or distorted.

Not a light read, but a very important one.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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