Corpse Politics and the Traveling Bones of Jamaluddin al-Afghani

IF 0.8 Q2 AREA STUDIES
Kelsey J. Utne
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Abstract:Forty-seven years after his death, Jamaluddin al-Afghani was reburied in Kabul. Amid the chaos of World War II, Afghanistan had enlisted the governments of British India, Turkey, and Iraq in a scheme to bring the bones of this nineteenth-century intellectual and Pan-Islamist out of exile in Istanbul, where they had lain buried since 1897. The subsequent exhumation, transnational corpse transfer, and reinterment in Kabul provoked the ire of the Iranian state, which contested Afghanistan's claim to be Jamaluddin's natal state. The signif cance of Jamaluddin's corpse was inseparable from certain aspects of his self-curated hagiography as a consummate wanderer and antiimperial Pan-Islamist. Consequently, the two states competed for custody of his remains. This transregional case study engages multidisciplinary scholarship on commemoration of the dead and remaking nationalist spaces. The article proposes that the physical location of the dead conjoined with individual hagiographies is key to disrupting or reifying nationalist narratives.
尸体政治和贾马鲁丁·阿富汗尼的旅行遗骨
摘要:贾马鲁丁·阿富哈尼死后四十七年,被重新安葬在喀布尔。在第二次世界大战的混乱中,阿富汗招募了英属印度、土耳其和伊拉克政府参与一项计划,将这位19世纪知识分子和泛伊斯兰主义者的尸骨从伊斯坦布尔流放出来,他们自1897年以来一直埋葬在那里。随后的挖掘、跨国尸体转移和在喀布尔的重新安置激起了伊朗政府的愤怒,伊朗政府对阿富汗声称是贾马鲁丁的出生国提出了质疑。Jamaluddin尸体的消失与他作为一个完美的流浪者和反帝国的泛伊斯兰主义者自行策划的圣徒传记的某些方面密不可分。因此,这两个州争夺对他的遗体的监护权。这项跨地区的案例研究涉及纪念死者和重塑民族主义空间的多学科学术。文章提出,死者的物理位置与个人传记相结合是颠覆或具体化民族主义叙事的关键。
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
0.90
自引率
0.00%
发文量
54
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