埃及穆斯林兄弟会与Ikhwanweb:反公众言论中的协商伦理/声音?

Soumia Bardhan
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引用次数: 0

摘要

以反公共理论为框架,并将埃及穆斯林兄弟会(MB)定位为一个反公众,反公众是通过不同的话语实践表达其反对需求和价值观的另类的、非主导的公众,本研究的目标是:(a)在2011年埃及起义之前的背景下,考察埃及穆斯林兄弟会作为一个反公众,是否在其网络修辞中描绘了一种协商的伦理/声音;(b)探索传统/西方的审议理念在埃及MB的网络修辞中是得到了支持还是受到了挑战;(c)评论Ikhwanweb作为一个反公共领域在为埃及议会提供展示其审议潜力的空间方面的作用。通过在埃及穆斯林兄弟会的网络修辞中寻找协商伦理的特征和证据——在世俗/专制的社会政治“背景”下由一个伊斯兰组织产生的“文本”中——本分析的首要目的是理解:(a)一个伊斯兰组织作为反公众的角色及其在非民主环境中的协商潜力;(b)这对思考非民主文化中不同社会主体群体之间的审议的影响;以及(c)互联网在促进专制背景下反公众审议潜力方面的作用。因此,从启发式的角度来看,本研究是对激发公众审议的关键问题的一种努力:我们如何与持有(或被认为持有)反审议态度和/或在非民主社会政治背景下运作的声音接触/接触?
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Egyptian Muslim Brotherhood and Ikhwanweb: Deliberative Ethic/Voice in a Counterpublic’s Rhetoric?
Using counterpublic theory as framework and situating the Egyptian Muslim Brotherhood (MB) as a counterpublic, counterpublics being alternative, non-dominant publics who voice their oppositional needs and values through diverse discursive practices, the goal of this study is to: (a) Examine, in the context of the years preceding the 2011 Egyptian uprising, whether the Egyptian MB, as a counterpublic, portrays a deliberative ethic/voice in its cyber rhetoric; (b) Explore whether traditional/Western ideas of deliberation are upheld or challenged in the cyber rhetoric of the Egyptian MB; and (c) Comment on the role of Ikhwanweb, as a counterpublic sphere, in providing the Egyptian MB a space to demonstrate its deliberative potential. By looking for traits and evidences of deliberative ethic in the Egyptian MB’s cyber rhetoric—in a ‘text’ produced by an Islamist organization functioning within a secular/authoritarian socio-political ‘context’—the overarching purpose of this analysis is to make sense of : (a) an Islamist organization’s role as a counterpublic and its deliberative potential in a non-democratic setting; (b) the implications of this for thinking about deliberation between diverse groups of social agents in non-democratic cultures; and (c) the role of the Internet in facilitating counterpublics’ deliberative potential in authoritarian contexts. Thus, from a heuristic standpoint, this study is an endeavor towards contributing to a key question that animates public deliberation: how can we engage/engage with voices that hold (or are assumed to hold) anti-deliberative attitudes and/or those that operate within non-democratic socio-political contexts?
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