非洲未来的过去:塞内加尔农民期望的物质视野

IF 0.6 0 ARCHAEOLOGY
F. Richard
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引用次数: 1

摘要

最近在非洲的人类学研究一直围绕着“未来”的问题。在经济不确定和全球动荡时期,在世界上不平等、贫困和风险不断扩大的地区,人们被迫到国外碰碰运气,未来是一个紧迫的问题。它也是一个关键的民族志棱镜,可以看到非洲人如何(重新)想象现代性晚期的时间、期望和可能性。正如珍妮特•罗伊特曼(Janet Roitman)最近所指出的那样,这些对话在全球“危机”情绪方面变得尤为突出。罗伊特曼认为,危机并不标志着与规范的“以前”、一种新的经验条件的客观决裂;相反,它是一种赋予当前历史新的道德分量的叙述,从而对未来可以想象的内容和方式进行了独特的解读。这篇文章被这种令人担忧的景象所感动,想知道考古学可能会对当代对非洲“未来”的感受做出什么贡献。回顾过去,展望未来,如何帮助我们梳理那些长期塑造非洲世界的暂时性因素?如何看待嵌套在物质文化中的各种时间,重新塑造对非洲现在和未来的持续反思?它将如何重新定义危机、忧郁、怀旧、希望等术语,这些术语是今天人们对欧洲大陆未来的设想?我希望通过回顾最近在西非农村的考古研究,并借鉴我自己对过去300年来塞内加尔农民社会期望的希望和焦虑的研究,来解决这些问题。虽然我的论点是初步的,但我的论点是,研究非洲未来的过去- -近代历史上的物质经验和对时间的期望- -提供了一个关于非洲大陆及其未来被写入的时间框架的生动辩论。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
African Futures Past: Material Horizons of Peasant Expectations in Senegal
Recent anthropological research in Africa has been buzzing with the question of “futures”. In times of economic uncertainty and global volatility, in areas of the world struck by widening inequalities, poverty and risk, where people have been compelled to try their luck abroad, the future is a pressing concern. It is also a key ethnographic prism for seeing how Africans (re)imagine time, expectations and possibility in late modernity. As recently pointed out by Janet Roitman, these conversations have acquired salience in relation to a global mood of “crisis”. Crisis, Roitman argues, does not mark an objective break with a normative “before”, a new experiential condition; rather, it is a narrative that imparts new moral weight to history in the present, and thus places a distinct spin on what and how futures can be imagined. Moved by this landscape of concerns, this article wonders what archaeology might contribute to contemporary feelings about “the future” in Africa. How does a look back, and a look forward from the past, help us to tease apart the temporalities that have shaped African worlds in the long term? How might a look at the kinds of time nested in material culture recast ongoing reflections on the present and future in Africa? How might it reframe the terms – crisis, melancholia, nostalgia, hope – in which continental futures are envisioned today? I hope to address these questions by reviewing recent archaeological research in rural West Africa and drawing on my own study of the hopes and anxieties that have framed peasant social expectations in Senegal over the past 300 years. My argument, though preliminary, is that examining Africa’s future pasts – material experiences and expectations of time in recent history – offers a lively contestation of the temporal frameworks into which the continent and its futures have been written.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.20
自引率
0.00%
发文量
14
期刊介绍: The Journal of Contemporary Archaeology is the first dedicated, international, peer-reviewed journal to explore archaeology’s specific contribution to understanding the present and recent past. It is concerned both with archaeologies of the contemporary world, defined temporally as belonging to the twentieth and early twenty-first centuries, as well as with reflections on the socio-political implications of doing archaeology in the contemporary world. In addition to its focus on archaeology, JCA encourages articles from a range of adjacent disciplines which consider recent and contemporary material-cultural entanglements, including anthropology, art history, cultural studies, design studies, heritage studies, history, human geography, media studies, museum studies, psychology, science and technology studies and sociology. Acknowledging the key place which photography and digital media have come to occupy within this emerging subfield, JCA includes a regular photo essay feature and provides space for the publication of interactive, web-only content on its website.
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