1st Edition

Infibulation Female Mutilation in Islamic Northeastern Africa

By Esther Hicks Copyright 1993

    Infibulation is the most extreme form of female circumcision. It plays an important role in the Islamic societies of northeastern Africa. Until now, the social significance and function of this practice has been poorly understood. This has been no less true of Western commentators who have condemned the practice than of relevant governments that have attempted to curb it. In Infibulation, Esther K. Hicks analyzes female circumcision as a cultural trait embedded in a historically traditional milieu and shows why it cannot be treated in isolation as a single issue destined for elimination. In its brief history it has been recognized as a pioneering piece of research with enormous consequences.

    As Hicks demonstrates, much of the popular resistance to official efforts to eradicate infibulation has actually come from women. Circumcision constitutes a rite of passage for female children. It initiates them into womanhood and makes them eligible for marriage. Often, this is the only positive status position available to women in traditional Islamic societies. Hicks points out that although female circumcision predates the introduction of Islam into the region, the religious culture has successfully codified infibulation into the structural nexus of marriage, family, and social honor at all socioeconomic levels.

    Figures, Maps, Plots, and Tables

    Preface xi

    Introduction

    1. Infibulation: Description, Function, and Diffusion
    Function: Indigenous and Academic Perspectives
    Diffusion

    2. The Socioeconomic Distribution of Infibulation
    Pastoralism in Northeastern Africa and the Sudan
    Pastoral-Rural-Urban Interaction and Infibulation

    3. Infibulation in the Social Nexus
    Closed Cultural Systems
    Islam: A Closed Cultural System
    Social Space in Islamic Societies
    Gender Identification and Differentiation in Open
    and Closed Cultural Systems
    The Status Position of Women in Infibulation-Practicing
    Societies
    Marriage Customs and Laws: An Overview
    Male Absenteeism, Sexual Abstinence, Sleeping
    Arrangements, and Infibulation
    Fertility Levels and Patterns, Mortality and Birthrates,
    Sex Ratio Distribution, and Infibulation

    4. Methodological Approach and Research Strategy
    The Problem of Sources
    Sample Selection and Statistical Analysis
    Statistical Analysis
    The HOMALS-technique

    5. Infibulation and the Composite Variables
    The Variables Considered
    Marriage, Status, and the Practice of Infibulation
    Early Marriage and Infibulation
    The Composite Variables

    6. The Future of Infibulation

    Biography

    Esther Hicks