Stitching a rights narrative: How Syrian women in Shatila use embroidery to express ideas about social justice

IF 1.4 3区 社会学 Q2 ANTHROPOLOGY
Sofie Verclyte, Tine Destrooper
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Abstract Human rights can be seen as a means to improve people's lived realities. Yet the language and practice of human rights are not always moored in these realities. What happens to the meaning of human rights when these are expressed in (partly non‐verbal) ways that are deeply rooted in lived—embodied, material, and cultural—realities, and how does that practice transform ideas about rights? In this article, we describe how women from Syrian refugee communities living in the Shatila refugee camp in Beirut use the skilled practice of embroidery to express and negotiate what they consider to be their rights and what they are entitled to. In doing so, they foreground a deeply indivisible, multi‐layered, and multi‐perspectival understanding of justice and more specifically of how they understand their rights. These perspectives, we argue, are intrinsically rooted in the embodied, material, and cultural practice through which they emerge, and offer avenues for enriching human rights debates.
拼接权利叙事:沙提拉的叙利亚妇女如何用刺绣来表达关于社会正义的想法
人权可以被看作是改善人们生活现实的一种手段。然而,人权的语言和实践并不总是与这些现实相联系。当人权以(部分非语言的)方式深深根植于具体的、物质的和文化的现实时,人权的意义会发生什么变化?这种实践如何改变有关权利的观念?在这篇文章中,我们描述了生活在贝鲁特Shatila难民营的叙利亚难民社区的妇女如何使用熟练的刺绣实践来表达和谈判他们认为是他们的权利和他们有权得到的东西。在这样做的过程中,他们对正义,更具体地说,他们如何理解自己的权利,提出了一个深刻的、不可分割的、多层次的、多视角的理解。我们认为,这些观点本质上根植于它们产生的具体、物质和文化实践,并为丰富人权辩论提供了途径。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.40
自引率
9.10%
发文量
28
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