五旬节乌干达的纯洁规则

Henni Alava, A. Gusman
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引用次数: 2

摘要

有关恋爱关系和性的规则——我们称之为“纯洁规则”——是乌干达五旬节派信仰的核心。在教堂的公共舞台上,乌干达针对艾滋病的“ABC”应对规则的重生变体——“结婚前戒酒,结婚后要忠诚”——被明确地呈现出来,不容讨价还价。然而,在教会成员的生活中,在他们彼此之间的交谈中,或者在小的教会团体中,往往会为解释和审议官方严格的规定创造空间。在这篇文章中,我们使用了来自乌干达城市五旬节教会的田野调查的人种学材料来描述规则如何作用于人,以及人如何作用于规则。我们将这种关系“规则工作”的过程描述为发生在个人与教会、教会小团体和上帝之间关系的连接点上。在违反规则的情况下,或者在规则的性质受到质疑的情况下,规则工作的动态变得特别明显。可以确定规则工作的三个中心轴:首先,(声称的)违规者在教会等级中的地位;第二,他们的违法行为为他人所知的公开程度;第三,他们与上帝的关系。将规则作为人类学分析的对象,凸显了Morgan Clarke(2015)所说的宗教传统的“规则性”,以及我们所描述的宗教信徒生活的混乱,是如何相互平行存在的。“规则”和“混乱”相互作用的地方是规则工作发生的地方,也是最能有效地观察到它的地方。关键词:道德,伦理,宗教,性,越轨
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Purity rules in Pentecostal Uganda
Rules concerning romantic relationships and sex—what we term ‘purity rules’—are central to Pentecostalism in Uganda. In  public church arenas, the born-again variant of the rules laid down during Uganda’s ‘ABC’ response to HIV/AIDS — ‘abstain till marriage and be faithful once you marry’—are presented as clear and non-negotiable. Yet in church members’ lives, and in their conversations with each other or in small church groups, space is often created for interpretation and deliberation about the officially strict rules. In this article, we use ethnographic material from fieldwork in urban Pentecostal churches in Uganda to describe how rules work on people, and people work on rules. We describe this process of relational ‘rulework’ as taking place at the nexus of an individual’s relationship to the church, to small groups at the church, and to God. The  dynamics of rulework become particularly evident at occasions where rules are transgressed, or where the nature of the rules—and thus of possible transgression—is questioned. Three central axes of rulework can be identified: first, the (claimed) transgressor’s position in church hierarchy; second, the level of publicity at which their transgression is made known to others; and third, their relationship to God. Approaching rules as objects of anthropological analysis foregrounds how what Morgan Clarke (2015) has called the ‘ruliness’ of religious traditions, and what we describe as the messiness of religious adherents’ lives, exist in parallel with each other. Where ‘ruliness’ and ‘messiness’ interact is where rulework takes place and where it can most productively be ethnographically observed. Keywords: Morality, ethics, religion, sex, transgression
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