基遍人策略

Fred Astren
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引用次数: 1

摘要

在穆斯林、基督徒和犹太人的文学作品中,嵌入了历史化的叙述,旨在使中世纪伊斯兰社会中少数民族和宗派团体的地位合理化和背景化。其中有一些,乍一看,讲述了一个少数群体故意虚构历史的故事,目的是欺骗穆斯林当局,从而获得优势。这种叙事策略的原型可以在《约书亚记》中看到,在书中,“异教”基遍人使用了一种诡计,以获得对征服的一神论以色列人的认可和保护,以色列人被上帝命令消灭异教徒。三个案例研究(Ḥarrān的萨比人、卡拉特犹太人和海巴尔犹太人)表明,中世纪伊斯兰教中类似的故事往往是共同生产的结果,这种现象构成了主流文化和亚文化之间的一种文化协商;统治者和臣民之间,穆斯林和非穆斯林之间,甚至是竞争的次等群体之间。关于哈里发al-Ma 'mūn、先知Muḥammad或其他关键人物的重塑叙事,为占主导地位的穆斯林宗教和文化提供了叙事许可,允许他们容忍那些在神学或实践上挑战穆斯林集体观念的团体的存在,相应地,这些团体可能被认为是不可接受的,也可能不被认为是不可接受的。这些叙述也为下层阶级提供了一种关于他们在伊斯兰社会中地位的起源神话。在这些记忆、历史和文学建构的复杂交织中,利害攸关的是从属群体的权利和义务。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Gibeonite Gambit
Embedded in the literature of Muslims, Christians, and Jews are historicized narratives that purport to rationalize and contextualize the place of minority and sectarian groups in medieval Islamic society. Among these are those that, at first reading, tell the story of an intentional fictionalizing of history on the part of a minority group with the intent to deceive Muslim authorities and thereby gain advantage. A prototype for this narrative strategy is observed in the Book of Joshua, wherein the “pagan” Gibeonites employ a ruse to secure recognition and protection from the conquering monotheistic Israelites, who had been commanded by God to exterminate pagans. Three case studies (on the Sabians of Ḥarrān, Karaite Jews, and Khaybarī Jews) reveal that similar stories in medieval Islam are often the result of co-production, a phenomenon which constitutes a kind of cultural negotiation between the dominant culture and a sub-culture; between rulers and subject peoples, between Muslims and non-Muslims, and even between competing subaltern groups. Reshaped narratives about the caliph al-Ma‘mūn, the Prophet Muḥammad, or other key figures offered narrativized permission for the dominant Muslim religion and culture to tolerate the existence of groups whose theologies or practices challenged Muslim assumptions of collectivity, and correspondingly, might or might not be otherwise deemed unacceptable. These narratives also provided subalterns a kind of myth of origin for their place in Islamic society. What is at stake in these complex interweavings of memory, history, and literary construction are the rights and duties of the subordinate groups.
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