posted on 2019-04-25, 14:08authored byIrit Dekel, Bernhard Forchtner, Ibrahim Efe
The circumcision debate in Germany in 2012 is an exemplary case for symbolic struggles over national
boundaries. The debate became a site for the negotiation of traditions practiced by religious minorities.
We ask, first, how the clinical gaze constitutes Muslim and Jewish others. Second, we investigate how
‘writing around’ the debate’s center, bodily integrity, became meaningful through analogies to other
practices said to harm it. We compare newspaper coverage in Germany, Israel and Turkey, and reveal
transnational discursive dynamics that transgress national boundaries. We show how ‘otherness’ of
Muslims and Jews remains present in a self-perceived secular, liberal imaginary.
History
Citation
National Identities, 2019
Author affiliation
/Organisation/COLLEGE OF SOCIAL SCIENCES, ARTS AND HUMANITIES/Department of Media, Communication and Sociology
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