印尼街头儿童和青年对个体和集体身份的建构与保护

H. Beazley
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引用次数: 126

摘要

摘要:印度尼西亚大城市的街头流浪儿童数量激增。在国家和主导社会的眼中,这些孩子被视为违反了社会,因为他们的存在与国家关于家庭价值观和公共秩序的意识形态话语相矛盾。这种罪行使人们有理由“清理”街头的儿童、逮捕、监禁,在某些极端情况下甚至施以酷刑和灭绝。作为对边缘化和从属地位的回应,中爪哇日惹的街头儿童为了生存发展了一套“策略清单”。这包括在城市中占有城市小生境,在那里他们能够赚钱、感到安全并找到乐趣。这些空间已经成为构建身份的领域,在这里形成了另类社区,在这里,街头儿童为他们在日常生活中面临的困境创造了集体解决方案。本文对存在于这些边缘空间中的街头男孩的社会世界进行了社会分析。利用Visano(1990)关于街头儿童生活作为“职业”的概念,我研究了街头儿童亚文化的社会化:Tikyan。通过运用特纳(1985,1994)的自我分类理论,我讨论了街头男孩的个人身份建构和表现是如何与藏族集体身份持续互动的。此外,通过借鉴亚文化理论家的工作,我反思了西藏人如何发展自己的街头道德、价值观和等级制度,作为对他们被强加的排斥的一种反应和颠覆。我展示了西藏人如何积极地拒绝他们的“受害者”或“越轨者”标签,并“装饰街头生活,使其在他们眼中变得愉快”。他们不会抱怨他们的生活(这被认为是不好的形式),而是强调他们觉得住在街上的好处。他们总是试图寻找街头生活比传统生活更好的证据。问题往往被掩盖起来,以幽默和轻松的漠视来对待,孩子们为自己创造了一种信条:在街上很好;一种为了使生活更容易忍受而建立起来的精神哲学。在几个月或几年的时间里,街头儿童和青少年学会了与自己群体的期望互动和遵守,并且更容易受到群体的影响。正是通过这种方式,Tikyan社区使街头儿童能够建立新的身份,并且是街头儿童可以表达他们对主流社会对待他们的方式的集体愤慨的一种手段。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Construction and Protection of Individual and Collective Identities by Street Children and Youth in Indonesia
Abstract:Indonesia has a proliferation of children living on the streets of its larger cities. In the eyes of the state and dominant society, these children are seen to be committing a social violation, as their very presence contradicts state ideological discourse on family values and ideas about public order. Such an offence justifies the “cleaning up” of children from the streets, arrests, imprisonment and, in some extreme cases, torture and extermination. As a response to their marginalisation and subordination, street children in Yogyakarta, Central Java, have developed a “repertoire of strategies” in order to survive. These include the appropriation of urban niches within the city, in which they are able to earn money, feel safe and find enjoyment. These spaces have become territories in which identities are constructed, and where alternative communities are formed, and where street kids have created collective solutions for the dilemmas they confront in their everyday lives.This paper is a social analysis of the street boys' social world which exists within these marginal spaces. Using Visano's (1990) concept of a street child's life as a ‘career, I examine the socialisation into the street child subculture: the Tikyan. By employing Turner's (1985,1994) ‘self-categorization theory, I discuss how a street boy's individual identity construction and performance entails a continual interaction with the Tikyan collective identity. Further, by drawing on the work of subcultural theorists, I reflect on how the Tikyan have developed their own code of street ethics, values and hierarchies, as a reaction to, and a subversion of, their imposed exclusion. I show how the Tikyan actively reject their ‘victim or ‘deviant label, and ‘decorate street life so that it becomes agreeable in their eyes. Instead of complaining about their lives (which is considered bad form), they reinforce the things that they feel are good about living on the street. Always, they are attempting to look for proof that street life is better than conventional life. Problems are often glossed over and treated with humour and a light-hearted disregard, and the children create a doctrine for themselves that it is ‘great in the street; a cod-philosophy which is constructed to make life more tolerable. Over the months or years street children and youth learn to interact and comply with the expectations of their own group, and are more influenced by it. It is in this way that the Tikyan community enables a street child to establish a new identity, and is a means through which street children can voice their collective indignation at the way they are treated by mainstream society.
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