跨越国界的亲密战争:可怕的遭遇、承认和厄瓜多尔基多的“哥伦比亚武装冲突”

IF 2.6 1区 社会学 Q1 ANTHROPOLOGY
Alana Ackerman
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引用次数: 0

摘要

许多关于战争的人类学研究——尤其是“内战”——关注的是在国家范围内有组织的政治团体之间犯下的暴力行为。相比之下,本文考察了“内部武装冲突”如何跨越国际边界,在被认为是战争外部的空间中以人际暴力的形式出现。更具体地说,我展示了“哥伦比亚武装冲突”是如何在厄瓜多尔基多的难民和他们的迫害者之间展开的,通过基于危及生命的认识过程的短暂相遇。这些日常遭遇构成了“亲密战争”,这是一种关系状态,涉及“陌生人”或彼此不一定熟悉的人之间可怕的社会依恋——威胁的语言和身体手势和暗示。在这种情况下,难民制定了逃避策略,以避免被迫害者发现,例如跳公共汽车,用视觉扫描周围环境,避开其他哥伦比亚人。跨越国界的恐怖遭遇,以及难民避免遭遇的策略,动摇了人们对承认的渴望、战争发生的地点和方式,以及什么是逃跑的规范假设。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Intimate war across borders: Terrifying encounters, recognition, and “the Colombian armed conflict” in Quito, Ecuador

Much anthropological scholarship on war—particularly “civil war”—focuses on violence perpetrated between organized political groups within the confines of a national space. In contrast, this article examines how “internal armed conflict” manifests across international borders, irrupting as interpersonal violence in spaces that are supposedly external to war. More specifically, I demonstrate how “the Colombian armed conflict” unfolds between refugees and their persecutors in Quito, Ecuador, through fleeting encounters based upon processes of life-threatening recognition. These everyday encounters constitute “intimate war,” a relational condition of world-making involving terrifying social attachments—threatening verbal and physical gestures and cues—between “strangers,” or people who are not necessarily familiar with each other. In this context, refugees enact strategies of evasion to avoid detection by their persecutors, such as bus hopping, visually scanning their surroundings, and avoiding other Colombians. Terrifying encounters across borders, and refugees’ strategies to avoid them, unsettle normative assumptions about the desirability of recognition, where and how war happens, and what constitutes escape.

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来源期刊
American Anthropologist
American Anthropologist ANTHROPOLOGY-
CiteScore
4.30
自引率
11.40%
发文量
114
期刊介绍: American Anthropologist is the flagship journal of the American Anthropological Association, reaching well over 12,000 readers with each issue. The journal advances the Association mission through publishing articles that add to, integrate, synthesize, and interpret anthropological knowledge; commentaries and essays on issues of importance to the discipline; and reviews of books, films, sound recordings and exhibits.
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