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Journal Article

Citation

Mitchell M, Rogers J. Crit. Criminol. 2021; 29(4): 707-721.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2021, American Society of Criminology, Publisher Holtzbrinck Springer Nature Publishing Group)

DOI

10.1007/s10612-021-09580-2

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

Legal regulations of the body produce and seek to protect specific imaginations of the body in an idealized form--that is, not only what a body is but also what it ought to be. In this article, we apply a queer criminological approach to interrogate the regulation of the body-that-ought-to-be that has animated two legal interventions regarding body modification: the criminalization of female genital cutting (FGC), often described in law as female genital mutilation (FGM), and the regulation of gender-affirming manual hormone use. By analyzing discourses that have circulated in Australian law regarding both practices, we show how the legitimacy of a given body modification has been tied to that modification's potential to either threaten or affirm a body's capacity to produce intelligible gender. We contend, on this basis, that the body that the law has sought to protect in these instances is a body that is not queer.


Language: en

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