对亚裔美国人宗教的反思:变革的希望与APARRI

IF 0.1 4区 哲学 0 RELIGION
Tamara C. Ho
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US academic scholarship has operated with particularly skewed notions and stereotypical views of Asian Americans and their engagement with religion. Teaching and scholarship rarely take into consideration how race is a defining and intersectional factor in the study of religion. Reshaping public knowledge and the narrative around Asian American religions is not only timely but also urgent because of increasing concern about anti-Asian hate—metastasized during the Islamophobic period following 9/11 and the Trump presidency, and intensified by the COVID pandemic since early 2020. Asian American and Pacific Islander religious communities are important elements of racial justice work and centers of political mobilizing. More critical attention to community dynamics, coalition building, and research in this sub-field can enhance the understanding of not only international relations among the United States, Asian nations, and Oceania (the transnational region often known as the Pacific Rim), but also interracial encounters, alliances, and diverse histories within the United States. Only relatively recently has there emerged a critical mass of scholars who can understand these intertwined, intersectional dynamics of race, gender, and religion, and how they shape perceptions of Asian American religious life. For [End Page 117] Click for larger view View full resolution Fig 1. Screenshot of photograph shown by Cabezón during his online 2020 AAR presidential address. example, during his 2020 presidential address on \"The Study of Buddhism and the AAR [American Academy of Religion],\" José I. Cabezón shared an archival photograph from the 1960s of the \"Asian Religions\" section meeting at an annual AAR conference: it showed a room full of white men and an all-male cisgender panel of white scholars at the front (fig. 1).1 It was not until 2019 that the annual AAR conference hosted a panel on \"Asian American Buddhism and American Belonging\" that was comprised entirely of Asian American scholar-teachers of varying genders, ethnicities, and Buddhist traditions. Organized by Sharon A. Suh, this panel was notable not only in its Asian American focus and diverse embodiment, but audience members also praised its remarkable ethos of collegiality, accountability, and mutual respect—a welcome and rare shift from the formality, competition, and self-promotion that is often the normative modality at academic gatherings. As an interdisciplinary feminist comparativist, my scholarship has always focused on minoritized genders, women, and nonbinary individuals (e.g., trans-gender Burmese spirit mediums, or nat kadaw) in order to highlight how marginalized, ignored, and stigmatized populations can function as cultural producers, offering critical insights into the workings of power, community, and the logics of heteropatriarchy and hegemony. I have been told that I often cite too many folks in my research and publications. My citational practice centers on respecting and illuminating feminist [End Page 118] genealogies. In my publications, I spotlight minoritized colleagues, mentors, and friends of color whose work in critical ethnic/race studies, postcolonial/transnational feminist studies, and cultural studies has shaped, influenced, and informed my own thinking. This epistemological practice follows the tradition of Black and Native feminist theorists such as the Combahee River Collective, Alice Walker, Paula Gunn Allen, and Deborah Miranda who also named their maternal/feminist genealogies as a counterhegemonic intervention into the patriarchal ecology of knowledge production.2 Feminist theorist Sara Ahmed writes that citation is \"how we acknowledge our debt to those who came before; those who helped us find our way\" and discusses how she intentionally cites \"feminists of color who have contributed to the project of naming and dismantling the institutions of patriarchal whiteness.\"3 Yet Carrie Mott and Daniel Cockayne categorize...","PeriodicalId":44347,"journal":{"name":"JOURNAL OF FEMINIST STUDIES IN RELIGION","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":0.1000,"publicationDate":"2023-09-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Reflections on Asian American Religions: Transformative Hope and APARRI\",\"authors\":\"Tamara C. 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Teaching and scholarship rarely take into consideration how race is a defining and intersectional factor in the study of religion. Reshaping public knowledge and the narrative around Asian American religions is not only timely but also urgent because of increasing concern about anti-Asian hate—metastasized during the Islamophobic period following 9/11 and the Trump presidency, and intensified by the COVID pandemic since early 2020. Asian American and Pacific Islander religious communities are important elements of racial justice work and centers of political mobilizing. More critical attention to community dynamics, coalition building, and research in this sub-field can enhance the understanding of not only international relations among the United States, Asian nations, and Oceania (the transnational region often known as the Pacific Rim), but also interracial encounters, alliances, and diverse histories within the United States. Only relatively recently has there emerged a critical mass of scholars who can understand these intertwined, intersectional dynamics of race, gender, and religion, and how they shape perceptions of Asian American religious life. For [End Page 117] Click for larger view View full resolution Fig 1. Screenshot of photograph shown by Cabezón during his online 2020 AAR presidential address. example, during his 2020 presidential address on \\\"The Study of Buddhism and the AAR [American Academy of Religion],\\\" José I. Cabezón shared an archival photograph from the 1960s of the \\\"Asian Religions\\\" section meeting at an annual AAR conference: it showed a room full of white men and an all-male cisgender panel of white scholars at the front (fig. 1).1 It was not until 2019 that the annual AAR conference hosted a panel on \\\"Asian American Buddhism and American Belonging\\\" that was comprised entirely of Asian American scholar-teachers of varying genders, ethnicities, and Buddhist traditions. Organized by Sharon A. Suh, this panel was notable not only in its Asian American focus and diverse embodiment, but audience members also praised its remarkable ethos of collegiality, accountability, and mutual respect—a welcome and rare shift from the formality, competition, and self-promotion that is often the normative modality at academic gatherings. As an interdisciplinary feminist comparativist, my scholarship has always focused on minoritized genders, women, and nonbinary individuals (e.g., trans-gender Burmese spirit mediums, or nat kadaw) in order to highlight how marginalized, ignored, and stigmatized populations can function as cultural producers, offering critical insights into the workings of power, community, and the logics of heteropatriarchy and hegemony. I have been told that I often cite too many folks in my research and publications. My citational practice centers on respecting and illuminating feminist [End Page 118] genealogies. In my publications, I spotlight minoritized colleagues, mentors, and friends of color whose work in critical ethnic/race studies, postcolonial/transnational feminist studies, and cultural studies has shaped, influenced, and informed my own thinking. 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引用次数: 0

摘要

尽管自19世纪末以来,亚裔美国作家一直在写美国社区的宗教(可以追溯到我们最早的作家之一隋善远),但由于对白人和黑人社区以及白人基督教霸权的普遍关注,亚裔美国人的信仰社区一直被边缘化,并且在更大的美国宗教公共叙事中一直被歪曲。由于结构性种族主义、东方主义和认识论上的盲点,对亚裔美国人和太平洋岛民(AAPI)宗教的研究和教学在学术界(无论是在世俗机构还是神学机构)往往得不到支持和认可。对于亚裔美国人及其宗教活动,美国学术研究一直带有特别扭曲的观念和刻板印象。教学和学术研究很少考虑到种族在宗教研究中如何成为一个决定性的、交叉的因素。重塑公众对亚裔美国人宗教的认识和叙事不仅及时,而且迫在眉睫,因为在9/11和特朗普总统任期后的伊斯兰恐惧症时期,人们越来越担心反亚洲仇恨的扩散,并因2020年初以来的新冠疫情而加剧。亚裔美国人和太平洋岛民宗教社区是种族正义工作的重要组成部分和政治动员的中心。对社区动态、联盟建设和这一子领域的研究给予更多的批判性关注,不仅可以增进对美国、亚洲国家和大洋洲(通常被称为环太平洋地区的跨国地区)之间国际关系的理解,还可以增进对美国内部种族间相遇、联盟和不同历史的理解。直到最近才出现了一批学者,他们能够理解种族、性别和宗教之间这些相互交织、相互影响的动态,以及它们如何塑造对亚裔美国人宗教生活的看法。[结束页117]点击查看大图查看全分辨率图1。Cabezón在他的2020年AAR总统在线演讲中展示的照片截图。例如,在2020年关于“佛教研究与美国宗教学会”的总统演讲中,jos·i·Cabezón分享了一张20世纪60年代在美国宗教学会年度会议上“亚洲宗教”部分会议上的档案照片:照片上,一间屋子里坐满了白人男性,前排是一群全男性的白人学者(图1)直到2019年,年度AAR会议才举办了一个关于“亚裔美国佛教和美国归属感”的小组讨论,该小组完全由不同性别、种族和佛教传统的亚裔美国学者教师组成。该小组由Sharon A. Suh组织,不仅以亚裔美国人为焦点和多元化的体现而引人注目,而且听众也赞扬了其卓越的合作精神,问责制和相互尊重-这是一种受欢迎和罕见的转变,从通常是学术聚会规范模式的形式,竞争和自我推销。作为一个跨学科的女权比较主义者,我的学术研究一直集中在少数性别、女性和非二元个体(例如,跨性别的缅甸灵媒,或nat kadaw),以突出边缘化、被忽视和被污名化的人群如何作为文化生产者发挥作用,为权力、社区的运作以及异性父权制和霸权的逻辑提供批判性的见解。有人告诉我,在我的研究和出版物中,我经常引用太多的人。我的引用实践集中在尊重和阐明女权主义者的谱系。在我的出版物中,我关注少数族裔的同事、导师和有色人种的朋友,他们在批判性民族/种族研究、后殖民/跨国女权主义研究和文化研究方面的工作塑造、影响并告知了我自己的思想。这种认识论实践遵循了黑人和土著女权主义理论家的传统,如Combahee River Collective、Alice Walker、Paula Gunn Allen和Deborah Miranda,他们也将自己的母系/女权主义谱系命名为对知识生产的父权制生态的反霸权干预女权主义理论家萨拉·艾哈迈德(Sara Ahmed)写道,引用是“我们承认对前人的亏欠的方式;那些帮助我们找到方向的人”,并讨论了她如何有意引用“有色人种女权主义者,他们为命名和拆除父权制白人制度的项目做出了贡献”。然而,嘉莉·莫特和丹尼尔·考凯恩把……
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Reflections on Asian American Religions: Transformative Hope and APARRI
Reflections on Asian American ReligionsTransformative Hope and APARRI Tamara C. Ho (bio) Despite the long history of Asian American authors writing about religion in US communities since the late 1800s (dating back to one of our earliest authors, Sui Sin Far), Asian American faith communities have been marginalized and persistently misrepresented in the larger public narrative of American religion because of the prevailing focus on white and Black communities and white Christian hegemony. Research and pedagogy on Asian American and Pacific Islander (AAPI) religions are often unsupported and unrecognized in the academy, both in secular and theological institutions, because of structural racism, orientalism, and epistemological blinders. US academic scholarship has operated with particularly skewed notions and stereotypical views of Asian Americans and their engagement with religion. Teaching and scholarship rarely take into consideration how race is a defining and intersectional factor in the study of religion. Reshaping public knowledge and the narrative around Asian American religions is not only timely but also urgent because of increasing concern about anti-Asian hate—metastasized during the Islamophobic period following 9/11 and the Trump presidency, and intensified by the COVID pandemic since early 2020. Asian American and Pacific Islander religious communities are important elements of racial justice work and centers of political mobilizing. More critical attention to community dynamics, coalition building, and research in this sub-field can enhance the understanding of not only international relations among the United States, Asian nations, and Oceania (the transnational region often known as the Pacific Rim), but also interracial encounters, alliances, and diverse histories within the United States. Only relatively recently has there emerged a critical mass of scholars who can understand these intertwined, intersectional dynamics of race, gender, and religion, and how they shape perceptions of Asian American religious life. For [End Page 117] Click for larger view View full resolution Fig 1. Screenshot of photograph shown by Cabezón during his online 2020 AAR presidential address. example, during his 2020 presidential address on "The Study of Buddhism and the AAR [American Academy of Religion]," José I. Cabezón shared an archival photograph from the 1960s of the "Asian Religions" section meeting at an annual AAR conference: it showed a room full of white men and an all-male cisgender panel of white scholars at the front (fig. 1).1 It was not until 2019 that the annual AAR conference hosted a panel on "Asian American Buddhism and American Belonging" that was comprised entirely of Asian American scholar-teachers of varying genders, ethnicities, and Buddhist traditions. Organized by Sharon A. Suh, this panel was notable not only in its Asian American focus and diverse embodiment, but audience members also praised its remarkable ethos of collegiality, accountability, and mutual respect—a welcome and rare shift from the formality, competition, and self-promotion that is often the normative modality at academic gatherings. As an interdisciplinary feminist comparativist, my scholarship has always focused on minoritized genders, women, and nonbinary individuals (e.g., trans-gender Burmese spirit mediums, or nat kadaw) in order to highlight how marginalized, ignored, and stigmatized populations can function as cultural producers, offering critical insights into the workings of power, community, and the logics of heteropatriarchy and hegemony. I have been told that I often cite too many folks in my research and publications. My citational practice centers on respecting and illuminating feminist [End Page 118] genealogies. In my publications, I spotlight minoritized colleagues, mentors, and friends of color whose work in critical ethnic/race studies, postcolonial/transnational feminist studies, and cultural studies has shaped, influenced, and informed my own thinking. This epistemological practice follows the tradition of Black and Native feminist theorists such as the Combahee River Collective, Alice Walker, Paula Gunn Allen, and Deborah Miranda who also named their maternal/feminist genealogies as a counterhegemonic intervention into the patriarchal ecology of knowledge production.2 Feminist theorist Sara Ahmed writes that citation is "how we acknowledge our debt to those who came before; those who helped us find our way" and discusses how she intentionally cites "feminists of color who have contributed to the project of naming and dismantling the institutions of patriarchal whiteness."3 Yet Carrie Mott and Daniel Cockayne categorize...
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.40
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期刊介绍: The Journal of Feminist Studies in Religion, the oldest interdisciplinary, inter-religious feminist academic journal in religious studies, is a channel for the publication of feminist scholarship in religion and a forum for discussion and dialogue among women and men of differing feminist perspectives. Active electronic and combined electronic/print subscriptions to this journal include access to the online backrun.
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