Cultural Studies - Critical Methodologies
Volume 16, Issue 4, 2016, Pages 414-426
Gender Violence as Global Phenomenon: Refugees, Genital Surgeries, and Neocolonial Projects of the United States (Article)
McKinnon S.L.*
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a
1 University of Wisconsin-Madison, 6016 Vilas, Madison, WI 53706, United States
Abstract
This essay investigates the mounting U.S. vision of gender violence since the 1990s as a global phenomenon. Focusing on U.S. legal, political, and media discourse about female circumcision in particular, and gender violence more broadly, this essay examines what U.S. imaginaries about global gender violence enable as warrants for neocolonial consolidations of U.S. power in the 21st century through international projects and programs of defense, development, and diplomacy. The essay first addresses the way female circumcision becomes recognized in the United States imaginary as a gendered violence that is distant from the United States and essential to the African continent and African women's bodies. It then questions what the recognition of gender violence as a global phenomenon does for U.S. neocolonial projects of defense, development, and diplomacy. It is the flexibility of gender violence as a rhetoric - its ability to be both specific and general - that makes it most potent in the service of U.S. neocolonial practices and projects around the world. © 2016 SAGE Publications.
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Link
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84978224540&doi=10.1177%2f1532708616640002&partnerID=40&md5=26ec9b5b2983ffa24e146f7f86b37ad8
DOI: 10.1177/1532708616640002
ISSN: 15327086
Cited by: 2
Original Language: English