‘When the World Turns Upside Down, Live Like a Bat!’ Idioms of Suffering, Coping, and Resilience Among Elderly Female Zande Refugees in Kiryandongo Refugee Settlement, Uganda (2019–20)

IF 1.2 Q3 POLITICAL SCIENCE
Isaac Waanzi Hillary, Bruno Braak
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引用次数: 3

Abstract

ABSTRACT ‘Resilience’ is trending in development theory and practice, where it is often measured using countable socio-economic outcomes. This paper draws on ethnographic research with South Sudanese Zande refugees in Kiryandongo Refugee Settlement, Uganda, to show a different and often overlooked perspective; that of elderly refugee women. Having lived through decades of war and displacement, these women have developed a rich body of knowledge about suffering, coping, and resilience. Mixing idioms, folktales, and anecdotes, they teach youth not to focus on outcomes or ‘big dreams’, but on a stoic acceptance of loss and perpetual precarity. They advise actions like farming, childcare, and faith. Even so, suffering and coping are socially conditioned and policed, and the intimate circle harbours both protection and dangers, like witchcraft. The women’s accounts contrast bleakly with up-beat neoliberal developmentalism which sees cash-infused ‘resilience’ as the key to refugees’ self-reliant futures.
“当世界颠倒过来时,要像蝙蝠一样生活!”乌干达Kiryandongo难民安置点老年女性赞德难民的苦难、应对和复原习语(2019-20)
摘要“韧性”在发展理论和实践中呈趋势,通常使用可计数的社会经济结果来衡量。本文借鉴了对乌干达Kiryandongo难民安置区南苏丹赞德难民的民族志研究,展示了一种不同的、经常被忽视的视角;老年难民妇女。这些妇女经历了几十年的战争和流离失所,对苦难、应对和复原能力有了丰富的了解。它们融合了成语、民间故事和轶事,教会年轻人不要关注结果或“远大梦想”,而是坚忍地接受损失和永远的不稳定。他们建议像务农、育儿和信仰这样的行动。即便如此,痛苦和应对是受社会制约和监管的,亲密圈子里既有保护,也有危险,就像巫术一样。这些妇女的叙述与新自由主义发展主义形成了鲜明对比,后者认为注入现金的“韧性”是难民自力更生未来的关键。
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来源期刊
Civil Wars
Civil Wars POLITICAL SCIENCE-
CiteScore
2.70
自引率
18.20%
发文量
23
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