Rose Oldfield Hayes
Appearance
Rose Oldfield Hayes (born 1936) was an American anthropologist at the State University of New York, Buffalo (SUNY Buffalo). After doing fieldwork in Sudan in 1970 interviewing women who had been infibulated, Hayes wrote the first scholarly paper on female genital mutilation (FGM) that used that term, and the first to incorporate information from the women themselves. Published in American Ethnologist in 1975,[1] the paper represented an important step forward in understanding the practice.[2]
Biography
[edit]Hayes was born in the United States in 1936 and studied at SUNY Buffalo. In 1975, she was researching the Shinnecock Reservation.[3]: 791
Selected works
[edit]- Hayes, Rose Oldfield (1975). "Warfare and the Disappearance of Meroe: A Preliminary Application of Cross-Cultural Findings to Nile Archaeology". In Nettleship, Martin A.; Dalegivens, R.; Nettleship, Anderson (eds.). World Anthropology: War, Its Causes and Correlates. The Hague and Paris: Mouton Publishers. pp. 345–358.
References
[edit]- ^ Hayes, Rose Oldfield (17 June 1975). "Female Genital Mutilation, Fertility Control, Women's Roles, and the Patrilineage in Modern Sudan: A Functional Analysis". American Ethnologist. 2 (4): 617–633. doi:10.1525/ae.1975.2.4.02a00030. JSTOR 643328.
- ^ Gruenbaum, Ellen (2001). The Female Circumcision Controversy: An Anthropological Perspective. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press. p. 21.
- ^ Nettleship, Martin A.; Dalegivens, R.; Nettleship, Anderson, eds. (1975). War, Its Causes and Correlates. Mouton. ISBN 978-90-279-7659-8.