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引用次数: 1
摘要
气候崩溃和美洲殖民化的批评者在早期现代政治神学中正确地确定了这两次危机的起源。他们试图用新的自然政治神学来应对这些危机,这些神学更加尊重“本土”人民的生态知识。但在这样做的过程中,这些批评者微妙地,也许是无意中,回忆起了他们所批评的殖民权力的元素。我解释了为什么会出现这种情况,考察了Bartoloméde Las Casas在批评西班牙征服时对自然人的使用,以及Thomas Harriot在关于英国殖民的文章中对自然居民的使用来描述“本土”美国人。两位作者都致力于促进对“本土”民族及其与“自然”关系的政治神学崇敬。这开启了现代政治神学中一种富有成效的权力形式。这种力量通过承认、尊重和保护与“自然”的“本土”关系,使欧洲基督徒在美洲的存在合法化
Critics of climate collapse and colonization in the Americas rightly identify the origin of these twin crises in early modern political theologies. They seek to combat these crises with new political theologies of nature that pay greater reverence to “native” peoples’ ecological knowledge. But in doing so, these critics subtly, perhaps unwittingly, recall elements of the colonial power they criticize. I explain why this is the case, examining Bartolomé de Las Casas’s use of naturales in his critiques of Spanish Conquest, and Thomas Harriot’s use of naturall inhabitants in his writing on English colonization to describe “native” Americans. Both authors aimed to promote politico-theological reverence for “native” peoples and their relationships with “nature.” This set into motion a productive form of power operating in modern political theologies. This power works by legitimizing the European-Christian presence in the Americas through their ability to recognize, respect, and protect “native” relationships with “nature.”
期刊介绍:
Critical Research on Religion is a peer-reviewed, international journal focusing on the development of a critical theoretical framework and its application to research on religion. It provides a common venue for those engaging in critical analysis in theology and religious studies, as well as for those who critically study religion in the other social sciences and humanities such as philosophy, sociology, anthropology, psychology, history, and literature. A critical approach examines religious phenomena according to both their positive and negative impacts. It draws on methods including but not restricted to the critical theory of the Frankfurt School, Marxism, post-structuralism, feminism, psychoanalysis, ideological criticism, post-colonialism, ecocriticism, and queer studies. The journal seeks to enhance an understanding of how religious institutions and religious thought may simultaneously serve as a source of domination and progressive social change. It attempts to understand the role of religion within social and political conflicts. These conflicts are often based on differences of race, class, ethnicity, region, gender, and sexual orientation – all of which are shaped by social, political, and economic inequity. The journal encourages submissions of theoretically guided articles on current issues as well as those with historical interest using a wide range of methodologies including qualitative, quantitative, and archival. It publishes articles, review essays, book reviews, thematic issues, symposia, and interviews.