"说我是狂热分子"

IF 0.1 0 RELIGION
Naomi Richman
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引用次数: 0

摘要

人类学家指出,在不均衡地使用 "信仰 "一词来描述不同文化对现实的表述时,存在着政治因素。他们注意到,西方人有时会将 "信仰 "一词用于描述非西方的认识论,而将他们自己的观点(例如以科学经验主义理论为基础的观点)归类为 "知识"。这是一个重要的批判,那么当我们的非西方对话者坚持被称为 "信徒 "时该怎么办呢?本文探讨了尼日利亚五旬节派教会的观点,他们不仅用 "信仰 "来描述自己的信仰,甚至还渴望被外人称为 "狂热分子"。文章以该教会的教义为基础,揭示了该教会与宗教学者对信仰的理解之间惊人的一致性,从而拉近了自诩为非洲基督教 "狂热分子 "的人与对他们进行批判性分析的人之间的距离。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
“Call me a fanatic"
Anthropologists have pointed to the politics at play in the uneven application of the term “belief” to describe different cultural representations of reality. They have observed that westerners sometimes reserve the term “belief” for the description of non-western epistemologies, while categorising their own perspectives, informed by theories of scientific empiricism for example, as “knowledge.” This is an important critique, so what to do when our non-western interlocutors insist on being called “believers?” This article considers the ideas of a Nigerian Pentecostal church who not only characterize their faith using the language of “belief,” but even aspire to be branded “fanatics” by outsiders. Drawing on the teachings of the church, striking congruences between the understandings of belief deployed by this group and by scholars of religion are brought to light, collapsing the distance between self-described African Christian “fanatics” and those who critically analyse them.
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来源期刊
Implicit Religion
Implicit Religion RELIGION-
CiteScore
0.30
自引率
0.00%
发文量
2
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