妇女与军事化

S. Zimmerman
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引用次数: 1

摘要

非洲妇女深受战争及其社会后果的影响。军事化描述了在战场之外改变社区的社会、政治、经济和文化领域的暴力过程。这些影响是有性别的。军事化改变了性别和定义女性人格的社会制度——婚姻、母亲、女儿、妻子、寡妇、妾、奴隶、家务劳动者等。由于这些制度是社会连续性和不连续性的参考,冲突使妇女成为民族主义意义的象征,并将她们的生育能力和角色集中在道德制度内。军事化促进了性别角色和性行为的转变——女性成为士兵和辅助战时劳工,以及武装暴力的战略目标。经济、社会和政治地位是决定妇女在冲突和军事化中的经历的关键。在冲突期间和冲突后,精英妇女往往更有能力维护个人安全,并在社区中发挥领导作用。地位低的妇女更容易受到奴役、性暴力/家庭暴力、粮食不安全、疾病、流离失所和死亡的伤害。女性对军事化的无数经历挑战了关于男性气质与好战或女性气质与和平主义之间无可争议的联系的错误假设。军事化改变了女性实现最佳未来的方式,因为性别的变化——获得权威的途径、法律责任、对道德秩序的看法以及公共生活和家庭生活之间的划分。少数古代和中世纪的贵族女性提供了传奇的战士女王的事迹,她们动员军队实现政治统一或保卫自己的社会。在几个中央集权的非洲社会中,高贵的女性——如太后或统治配偶——约束并加强了男性领导人的权威。达荷美派女团参加战斗。与长途奴隶贸易和19世纪国家建设相关的战争为精英女性和奴隶女性创造了截然不同的经历。非洲精英妇女依赖于奴隶出口所产生的资源,并从被俘和被奴役妇女的家务和农业劳动中受益。欧洲殖民和一神论的亚伯拉罕宗教的传播改变了非洲妇女的军事化经历。书面资料的性别偏见模糊了妇女在政治和/或宗教征服中参与社会军事化的程度。殖民化使受性别限制的获得权力和战斗力的途径正常化,也使根深蒂固的父权制和性别二分法正常化,这种二分法将男性气概等同于好战,将女性气概等同于非暴力。反殖民主义的革命言论支持非洲妇女参与非殖民化战争——作为新国家的自由战士和母亲。在后殖民时期,优先考虑父权和暴力权力的军事独裁统治下,妇女经历了巨大的个人和集体暴力。在20世纪90年代,西方的人道主义产业和全球媒体宣传非洲妇女是男性暴力的受害者和天生的和平缔造者的刻板形象。相反,非洲妇女在经历分离主义战争、军事独裁、种族灭绝、军阀和萨拉菲斯特军事化的社会中扮演了无数的角色。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Women and Militarization
African women are profoundly affected by warfare and its consequences in their societies. Militarization describes the violent processes that transform communities’ social, political, economic, and cultural spheres beyond the battlefield. These effects are gendered. Militarization transforms the social institutions that gender and define women’s personhood—marriage, motherhood, daughter, wife, widow, concubine, slave, domestic laborer, etc. Since these institutions are references for social continuity and discontinuity, conflict turns women into symbols of nationalistic significance and centers their procreative power and roles within regimes of morality. Militarization facilitates transformations in gendered roles and sexualities—women became soldiers and auxiliary wartime laborers, as well as the strategic targets of armed violence. Economic, social, and political status were key in determining women’s experiences of conflict and militarization. Elite women are often better-positioned to maintain their personal safety and access leadership roles in their communities during and after conflict. Low-status women were more vulnerable to enslavement, sexual/domestic violence, food insecurity, disease, displacement, and death. Women’s myriad experiences of militarization challenge false assumptions about the incontrovertible linkages between masculinity and belligerence or femininity and pacifism. Militarization alters how women realize optimal futures due to changes in gendered-access to authority, legal accountability, as well as perceptions of moral order and the division between public and domestic life. A handful of ancient and medieval noble women provide legendary exploits of warrior queens, who mobilized armies toward political unification or the defense of their societies. In several centralized African societies, noble women—as queen mothers or reign mates—constrained and bolstered the authority of male leaders. Dahomey fielded female regiments in battle. The warfare affiliated with long-distance slave trades and 19th-century state building created dichotomous experiences for elite and slave women. Elite African women depended on the resources generated from slave export, as well as benefited from the domestic and agricultural labor of captured and enslaved women. European colonization and the spread of monotheistic Abrahamic religions altered African women’s experiences of militarization. The gendered biases of written sources obscure the degree to which women participated in the militarization of their societies within political and/or religious conquest. Colonization normalized gender-restricted access to power and militancy, as well as entrenched patriarchy and gender dichotomies that equated masculinity with martiality and femininity with nonviolence. Anticolonial, revolutionary rhetoric championed African women’s participation in wars of decolonization—as freedom fighters and mothers within new nations. Women experienced great personal and communal violence in the postcolonial military dictatorships that prioritized patriarchal and violent power. During the 1990s, Western industries of humanitarianism and global media propagated stereotypical portrayals of African women as victims of male-perpetrated violence and as innate peacemakers. To the contrary, African women have played myriad roles in societies experiencing secessionist wars, military dictatorships, genocide, warlords, and Salafist militarization.
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