这个世界与“他者”:印孟边境的穆斯林身份与政治

IF 1.4 3区 社会学 Q2 INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
Å. Kolås
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引用次数: 0

摘要

本文调查了印度东北部的两个邦:阿萨姆邦和特里普拉邦的穆斯林“异类”,这两个邦以其种族、语言和文化多样性以及长期的武装和内乱历史而闻名。印度东北部的政治繁荣源于“我们”和“他们”之间的分歧,以及非法移民问题上的紧张局势,这些都是“他者”框架的重叠或交叉。这项研究询问了穆斯林的政治“他者”为何以及如何持续存在,以及为什么宗教框架,或印度教徒-穆斯林的分裂,在该地区的某些地区比在其他地区更为突出。通过对印度-孟加拉国边界印度一侧的特里普拉邦和阿萨姆邦南部的实地考察、历史记录和当代印刷媒体档案,本研究比较了印度教徒-穆斯林在这两个邻国政治中的争论,并发现了印度教徒-穆斯林分裂在阿萨姆邦的再现,以及特里普拉邦对穆斯林“他者”的抵制。本文的理论贡献在于将“他者”的概念与殖民和后殖民的再现框架相比较,以理解当代非西方的“差异世界”如何利用、再现和抵制殖民再现的残余。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
This World and the “Other”: Muslim Identity and Politics on the Indo-Bangladesh Border
This article investigates the “othering” of Muslims in two Northeast Indian states: Assam and Tripura, in a region known for its ethnic, linguistic and cultural diversity, and long history of militancy and civil unrest. Northeast Indian politics thrives on disagreement between “Us” and “Them” and tensions over illegal migration, drawing on overlapping or intersecting frames of “othering.” This study asks why and how the political “othering” of Muslims persists, and why the religious frame, or the Hindu–Muslim divide, is more salient in some parts of the region than in others. Drawing on fieldwork on the Indian side of the Indo-Bangladesh border in Tripura and southern Assam, historical records and contemporary print media archives, this study compares the role of Hindu–Muslim contention in the politics of the two neighboring states and finds reproduction of the Hindu–Muslim divide in Assam and resistance to Muslim “othering” in Tripura. The theoretical contribution of this article is to confront the concept of “othering” with colonial and post-colonial frameworks of representation to understand how contemporary non-Western “worlds of difference” capitalize on, reproduce and resist vestiges of colonial representations.
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来源期刊
Alternatives
Alternatives INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS-
CiteScore
2.30
自引率
15.40%
发文量
19
期刊介绍: A peer-reviewed journal, Alternatives explores the possibilities of new forms of political practice and identity under increasingly global conditions. Specifically, the editors focus on the changing relationships between local political practices and identities and emerging forms of global economy, culture, and polity. Published in association with the Center for the Study of Developing Societies (India).
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