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Twentieth century articles
|quote=
|pubmedID=18891187
|pubmedCID=
|DOI=
|doi=
|accessdate=2024-06-22
}}
}}
* {{TaddioA KatzJ IlersichAL KorenG 1997}}
* {{REFjournal
|last=McFadyen
|first=
|init=A
|author-link=
|etal=no
|title=Children have feelings too
|trans-title=
|language=
|journal=BMJ
|location=
|date=1998-05-23
|volume=316
|issue=
|article=
|page=1616
|url=https://www.cirp.org/library/psych/mcfadyen/
|archived=
|quote=At times, he literally roared with rage. This was interspersed with more quiet reflective periods when I would catch him staring down at his penis with tears in his eyes.
|pubmedID=9596619
|pubmedCID=1113220
|DOI=10.1136/bmj.316.7144.1616a
|accessdate=2024-06-28
}}
* {{REFjournal
|last=Maguire
|author-link=George Hill
|url=https://genitalwholeness.wordpress.com/article/circumcision-and-human-behavior-2y9nanfagw8nr-13/
|title=Circumcision and Human Behaviorhuman behavior: The emotional and behavioral effects of circumcision
|journal=Genital Wholeness
|date=2012-05-27
|issue=
|pages=
|quote=Medical doctors adopted male circumcision from religious practice into medical practice in England in the 1860s and in the United States in the 1870s. No thought was given to the possible behavioral effects of painful operations that excise important protective erogenous tissue from the male phallus.
|accessdate=2024-06-28
}}
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