"A detailed and thoughtful history of CÔte d’Ivoire that gives due placement to civilian women who have largely been ignored in the definitive historical monographs. . . . Grillo’s scholarship has groundbreaking strengths. For those interested in religion, her detailed documentation of myth, ritual, secret societies, symbolism, witchcraft, and the appeal to the spiritual domain-and her defense of the inclusion of this knowledge as a requisite in understanding a country’s history-is utterly exquisite. . . . The work is inimitable-Grillo is sensitive, sensible, and devotes attention to detail." - Dianna Bell (Reading Religion) “Ultimately, Grillo demonstrates how knowledge of the moral authority of women elders remained and remains embedded in West Africa and that women enact FGP to defend not only social equity and justice but also their own rights. <i>An Intimate Rebuke</i> will be required reading for all future analysis of women’s authority and mobilization.” - Jill E. Kelly (African Studies Review) “Grillo’s work redefines our understanding of the use of ritual and moral values in the current postcolonial political order by focusing on the ignored phenomenon of Female Genital Power.... Grillo’s work is an important contribution to the study of gender, religion, history, and politics, particularly in CÔte d’Ivoire but also in the whole West African subregion.” - Carole Ammann (Religious Studies Review)
Introduction 1
Part I. Home and the Unhomely: The Foundational Nature of Female Genital Power 19
1. Genies, Witches, and Women: Locating Female Powers 21
2. Matrifocal Morality: FGP and the Foundations of "Home" 54
3. Gender and Resistance: The "Strategic Essentialism" of FGP 81
Part II. Worldliness: FGP in the Making of Ethnicity, Alliance, and the War in CÔte D'Ivoire 117
4. Founding Knowledge/Binding Power: The Moral Foundations of Ethnicity and Alliance 121
5. Women at the Checkpoint: Challenging the Forces of Civil War 152
Part III. Timeliness: Urgent Situations and Emergent Critiques 171
6. Violation and Deployment: FGP in Politics in CÔte D'Ivoire 175
7. Memory, Memorialization, and Morality 198
Conclusion. An Intimate Rebuke: A Local Critique in the Global Postcolony 228
Notes 239
References 255
Index 275