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Article Dans Une Revue Women's Studies International Forum Année : 2001

WRITING WOMEN'S RITES: EXCISION IN EXPERIENTIAL AFRICAN LITERATURE

Résumé

Synopsis-This article examines "excision" (a.k.a. "female circumcision," Female Genital Mutilation [FGM] or, more recently, Female Genital Cutting [FGC]) in African Women's first-person accounts. While considering the shift from female third-person narratives to "experiential" texts, the article also outlines three steps-(1) in-passing; (2) auto(-)biography; and (3) suturing-in delineating the herstory of the representation of excision in postcolonial African literature, which in turn, contributes to the general shift in the literary text from rite to mutilation so that women's rites now clash with human rights.

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Dates et versions

hal-02004939 , version 1 (01-03-2019)

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  • HAL Id : hal-02004939 , version 1

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Chantal Zabus. WRITING WOMEN'S RITES: EXCISION IN EXPERIENTIAL AFRICAN LITERATURE. Women's Studies International Forum, 2001, 24, pp.335 - 345. ⟨hal-02004939⟩
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