跨代进行家庭、性别、宗教和种族认同:印度-东非裔伊斯梅利妇女的叙事民族志

IF 0.4 0 RELIGION
S. Trovão
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引用次数: 0

摘要

本文从叙事民族志的角度,深入探讨了印度东部非洲的尼扎里·伊斯玛仪女性在特定的权力和等级网络中构建和执行相互构成的身份的方式,以及她们所产生并传递给子女的当地知识。在葡萄牙殖民主义的最后几十年里,六名受访妇女生活在莫桑比克,她们面临着后殖民时期移民进程放大的矛盾和矛盾的现代化力量。对他们的传记和看护曲目的分析涉及一个交叉框架,以探索身份,边界和等级之间的联系,并结合多层次的矛盾心理概念,解决社会生活中矛盾心理的多种来源之间的辩证交叉。结论强调了他们所驾驭的矛盾结构和意识形态如何为他们提供了产生代际变革结果的资源。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Doing Family, Gender, Religion and Raced Identities across Generations: A Narrative Ethnography on Ismaili Women of Indian East African Heritage
Abstract Drawing from a narrative ethnography, this paper provides insight into the ways Nizari Ismaili women of Indian East African heritage constructed and performed their mutually-constitutive identities in specific networks of power and hierarchy, and the local knowledges they have produced and passed on to their children. Having lived in Mozambique during the final decades of Portuguese colonialism, the six women interviewed were exposed to contradictory and ambivalent modernizing forces amplified by postcolonial migration processes. The analysis of their biographies and caregiving repertoires involved an intersectional framing to explore the links between identities, boundaries and hierarchy, combined with a multilevel conception of ambivalence addressing the dialectic intersection between the multiple sources of ambivalence in social life. The conclusion highlights how the contradictory structures and ideologies they navigated offered them resources for producing intergenerational transformative outcomes.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.40
自引率
0.00%
发文量
31
期刊介绍: Journal of Muslim Minority Affairs is a peer reviewed research journal produced by the Institute of Muslim Minority Affairs (IMMA) as part of its publication programme. Published since 1979, the journalhas firmly established itself as a highly respected and widely acclaimed academic and scholarly publication providing accurate, reliable and objective information. Journal of Muslim Minority Affairs provides a forum for frank but responsible discussion of issues relating to the life of Muslims in non-Muslim societies. The journalhas become increasingly influential as the subject of Muslim minorities has acquired added significance. About 500 million Muslims, fully one third of the world Muslim population of 1.5 billion, live as minorities in 149 countries around the globe. Even as minorities they form significant communities within their countries of residence. What kind of life do they live? What are their social, political and economic problems? How do they perceive their strengths and weakness? What above all, is their future in Islam and in the communities of their residence? The journal explores these and similar questions from the Muslim and international point of view in a serious and responsible manner.
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