“医师追求人民的金钱”:南非青年的家庭与社区话语

Tony Nyundu
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引用次数: 0

摘要

2012年,南非圣公会主教、南非教会理事会(SACC)前主席Joe Seoka驳斥了Marikana(2012年8月16日,34名矿工在要求提高工资的抗议活动中被南非警察屠杀)的年轻人使用muthi (sangoma/inyanga提供的传统药物)来保护自己免受子弹伤害的说法,理由是他们受过良好的教育,不会相信这种说法。他的观点引起了社会观察家的注意,他们进一步提出了问题,不仅是关于受过教育和没有受过教育的人对传统信仰体系的看法,还包括在家庭和社区中如何谈论sangomas。这项研究调查了索韦托基亚韦洛的年轻人是否认为sangomas对他们的社区有帮助。此外,它还研究了年轻人是否认为或相信sangomas可以改善或贬低社区成员的生活(特别是在生病期间)。文献中的发现表明,社会化有助于塑造年轻人在家庭和社区中对传统治疗师的看法和表达。本文通过对南非索韦托(Soweto)基亚韦洛(Chiawelo)的11名年轻人和4名关键线人的深入采访,得出了有关不同类型的社会化及其对年轻人生活影响的证据。这项研究表明,虽然初级和二级社会化都有助于塑造年轻人对传统治疗师的看法,但观察和解释往往决定了Chiawelo的年轻人对传统治疗师的看法。该研究对“社会化”和“习惯”作为理论框架提出了质疑。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
“Sangomas Are after People’s Money”: Family and Community Discourses around the South African Youth
In 2012, Bishop Joe Seoka of the Anglican Church in South Africa, and former president of the South African Council of Churches (SACC), dismissed claims that young people in Marikana (where 34 mineworkers were massacred by the South African police during a protest for better wages on August 16, 2012) used muthi (traditional medicine provided by sangoma/inyanga) to protect themselves against bullets—reasoning that they were too well educated to believe such. His contention provoked social observers, who further raised questions not only on the views of the educated and non-educated towards traditional belief systems, but on how sangomas are talked about in families and across communities. This study looked at whether young people in Chiawelo, Soweto, think sangomas are helpful within their community or not. In addition, it looked at whether young people think or believe sangomas can improve or depreciate the lives of community members (expressly during sicknesses). Findings in the literature suggest that socialisation helps shape young people’s views and expressions towards traditional healers within their families and communities. Through in-depth interviews with 11 young men and four key informants in Chiawelo, a site in Soweto (South Africa), evidence about different types of socialisation and its influence on young men’s lives is drawn out in this article. The study suggests that although both primary and secondary socialisation helped shape young people’s views towards traditional healers, observation and interpretation often dictate in the way young men in Chiawelo view traditional healers. The study contests “socialisation” and “habitus” as theoretical frameworks.
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