扩展印度洋领域社会转型的历史研究

IF 0.2 Q3 HISTORY
Kenneth R. Hall
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引用次数: 0

摘要

西方史学将亚洲土著置于宫廷政治中心和最重要的商业贸易港口之外,以外生(殖民)前景为背景。16世纪以来的西方历史研究优先选择了外生的某些方面和声音,重点关注阿拉伯和波斯中东、印度、中国和西方,从19世纪开始以伊斯兰化、印度化、中国化和西方化等术语来代表。今天,研究印度洋的历史学家在将本土事物与外生事物并列时,给予它们“代理”。当地的活动、事件、信仰、机构、社区、个人和历史叙述都被强调、赋予了权重,并且“享有特权”,而不是依赖于外生因素。简单地把代理从外生者那里拿走,把它交给土著,似乎是克服“从船的甲板上”批评的更现实的方法,但以牺牲“另一个”为代价的强调和特权问题仍然存在。研究非西方的历史学家已经缓和了他们先前在这个问题上的立场,现在承认主要的外生文明(如中东、中国、印度和西方)对一些当地文化的影响的深度和规模。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Historical Study of Societal Transformations in the Extended Indian Ocean Realm
Western historiography placed the indigenous Asia beyond the court political centers and the most commercially prominent ports-of-trade in the background of an exogenous (colonial) foreground. Western historical research from the sixteenth century onward privileged selected aspects and voices of the exogenous, focusing on the Arabic and Persian Middle East, India, China, and the West, represented from the nineteenth century onward by the terms Islamization, Indianization, Sinification, and Westernization. Today, historians who study the Indian Ocean give “agency” to things indigenous when they are juxtaposed to things exogenous. Local activities, events, beliefs, institutions, communities, individuals, and historical narratives are emphasized, given weight, and “privileged” over dependency on the exogenous. Simply taking agency away from the exogenous and giving it to the indigenous may seem to be a more realistic approach to overcoming the “from the deck of a ship” critique, but the issue of emphasis and privileging at the expense of “another” remains. Historians researching the non-West have tempered their previously held stance on this issue and now admit the depth and scale of influence that major exogenous civilizations (e.g., the Middle East, China, India, and the West) have had on some local cultures.
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CiteScore
0.30
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26
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