多孔的世俗性:冷战时期韩国的宗教现代性与纵向宗教多样性

Religions Pub Date : 2024-07-25 DOI:10.3390/rel15080893
Kyuhoon Cho
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摘要

曾经占主导地位的世俗化理论预计宗教将在现代衰落,除此之外,近几十年来,宗教学术研究重新将世俗化视为塑造全球化世界中宗教和宗教的因素之一。在这一理论背景下,我在本文中以韩国为例,探讨了世俗与宗教在当代全球社会中的互动关系。文章重点描述了冷战时期韩国对世俗性的后殖民重新表述,以及宗教多样性在话语和组织上的相应转变。1945 年解放后,灵活的世俗-宗教分野取代了严格禁止宗教参与公共和政治活动的日本殖民世俗主义。多孔的世俗模式广泛允许宗教实体影响后殖民时期的国家建设进程。宗教价值、利益和资源被用于激励、推动和证明韩国人致力于发展整个国家社会。这种形式的世俗化成为一个关键条件,导致韩国的宗教格局以纵向和不平等的方式重组。一方面,佛教和基督教人口在宗教自由领域显著增长,宗教自由被视为反共产主义国家的一项重要意识形态原则。另一方面,民间信仰和少数宗教团体往往被视为 "迷信"、"伪宗教"、"异端 "甚至 "邪教"。在柔弱的世俗性的作用下,宗教多样性在后殖民社会中被重新分级。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Porous Secularity: Religious Modernity and the Vertical Religious Diversity in Cold War South Korea
Beyond the once dominant secularization thesis that anticipated the decline of religion in the modern era, the academic study of religion has in recent decades revisited secular as one of the factors that shape religion and religions in the globalized world. Against this theoretical backdrop, in this article, I use the case of South Korea to explore how secular and religion interacted in contemporary global society. It focuses on describing the postcolonial reformulation of secularity and the corresponding discursive and organizational transformation of religious diversity in Cold War South Korea. The Japanese colonial secularism rigidly banning the public and political engagement of religion was replaced by the flexible secular-religious divide after liberation of 1945. The porous mode of secularity extensively admitted religious entities to affect processes of postcolonial nation-building. Religious values, interests, and resources have been applied in motivating, pushing, and justifying South Koreans to devote themselves to developing the national community as a whole. Such a form of secularity became a critical condition that caused South Korea’s religious landscape to be reorganized in a vertical and unequal way. On one hand, Buddhist and Christian populations grew remarkably in the liberated field of religion, while freedom of religion was recognized as a key ideological principle of the anticommunist country. On the other hand, folk beliefs and minority religious groups were often considered “superstitions”, “pseudo religions”, “heretics”, or even “evil religions”. With the pliable secularity at work, religious diversity was reorganized hierarchically in the postcolonial society.
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