Criticism > Contemporary Literary Criticism > Walker, Alice (Vol. 103) - Judy Mann (review date 16 January 1994)
Walker, Alice (Vol. 103) - Judy Mann (review date 16 January 1994)
Judy Mann (review date 16 January 1994)
SOURCE: "Victims of Tradition," in Washington Post Book World, January 16, 1994, p. 4.
[In the following review, Mann praises Walker's and Pratibha Parmar's attempt to illuminate the prevalence of female genital mutilation in Africa, but faults the book for a slow start.]
The World Health Organization estimates that some 80 million women living today have undergone an ancient and excruciatingly painful ritual known as genital mutilation. It is widely practiced in Egypt, the Sudan and the Horn of Africa—by rigidly patriarchal cultures. Pretexts marshalled to defend the practice range from religion and hygiene to cultural traditions. But the true reason this humiliating, dangerous practice continues is to ensure that women will remain virgins until marriage, and to maintain control over women by destroying their ability to enjoy sex. Mutilated women are turned into sexual vessels for men, many of...
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- Introduction
- Principal Works
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Criticism
- Barbara Christian (essay date March/April 1981)
- David Bradley (essay date 8 January 1984)
- Alma S. Freeman (essay date Spring 1985)
- Philip M. Royster (essay date Winter 1986)
- Barbara T. Christian (essay date 1986)
- Susan Willis (essay date 1987)
- J. Charles Washington (essay date Spring 1988)
- Alice Hall Petry (essay date Winter 1989)
- Robert James Butler (essay date Summer 1993)
- Judy Mann (review date 16 January 1994)
- Victoria A. Brownworth (review date September-October 1994)
- Tobe Levin (review date Fall 1994)
- Claire Messud (review date 11 November 1994)
- Alyson R. Buckman (essay date Summer 1995)
- Francine Prose (review date 2 January 1996)
- Further Reading
- Copyright
