建立档案人物:苏菲文化在俄罗斯的转变Ijāza, 1880 - 1920

IF 0.6 0 RELIGION
Alfrid Bustanov, Shamil Shikhaliev, Ilona Chmilevskaia
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引用次数: 0

摘要

摘要本文分析了19世纪末20世纪初俄罗斯穆斯林使用教育证书(ijāza s)作为自我表达工具的情况。虽然传播ijāza作为构建理想穆斯林人格的一种手段,但手稿证据表明,有选择性地编纂ijāza杂集的方法可以成功地用于建立自己的档案人物形象——就像一个人希望在未来的传记书中出现的方式:不仅是作为声望血统的重要传播者,而且主要是作为他们选择组合的独特表现者。在已建立的苏菲派“秩序”边界内外的多个世系中,苏菲派证书的存在表明,苏菲派组织和实践的异质性日益增加,这是扩大文化曲目现象的一部分,个人可以从中吸取他们的档案角色。我们在这里分析的ijāza类型,即列出传播实践的单独文件和杂记,在很大程度上是他们所处时代的产物,正如我们所争论的那样,它们在俄罗斯帝国晚期的广泛传播表明,从奥斯曼帝国进口的ijāza文化前所未有的崛起。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Building an Archival Persona: The Transformation of Sufi Ijāza Culture in Russia, 1880s–1920s
Abstract This article analyses the uses of education certificates ( ijāza s) as a tool of self-expression by Russia’s Muslims in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. While the transmission of ijāza s as such served as a means of constructing the ideal Muslim personality, manuscript evidence suggests that a selective approach to compiling ijāza miscellanies could successfully be employed in building one’s own archival persona – the way how an individual wanted to appear on pages of future biographical books: not only as an important transmitter of prestigious lineages, but chiefly as a unique performer of their selective combinations. The presence of Sufi certificates on multiple lineages within and beyond the borders of the established Sufi ‘orders’ suggests the increasing heterogeneity of Sufi organization and practice that was part of the phenomenon of a broadening cultural repertoire, from which individuals could draw upon for their archival persona. The type of ijāza s that we analyse here, namely the separate documents and miscellanies listing the transmitted practices, were very much the product of their time and their wide circulation in late imperial Russia suggests, as we argue, an unprecedented rise of ijāza culture, imported from the Ottoman realm.
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来源期刊
Journal of Sufi Studies
Journal of Sufi Studies Arts and Humanities-History
CiteScore
1.00
自引率
0.00%
发文量
13
期刊介绍: The Journal of Sufi Studies furnishes an international scholarly forum for research on Sufism. Taking an expansive view of the subject, the journal brings together all disciplinary perspectives. It publishes peer-reviewed articles and book reviews on the historical, cultural, social, philosophical, political, anthropological, literary, artistic and other aspects of Sufism in all times and places. By promoting an understanding of the richly variegated Sufi tradition in both thought and practice and in its cultural and social contexts, the Journal of Sufi Studies makes a distinctive contribution to current scholarship on Sufism and its integration into the broader field of Islamic studies.
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