武装冲突在形成仇恨亚文化中的作用及其后果

Q3 Social Sciences
M. O. Attir
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引用次数: 0

摘要

2011年,当利比亚青年走上街头进行民粹主义起义,即众所周知的2011年2月17日革命时,许多利比亚人认为他们即将推翻20世纪最恶毒的独裁者之一穆阿迈尔·卡扎菲,并建立一个新的民主国家。卡扎菲做出了强有力的回应,希望将这场运动扼杀在襁褓之中。但是卡扎菲的军队和那些走上街头的人之间的冲突很快变成了内战,在此期间,利比亚社会分裂成两大群体:一个支持起义,另一个支持政权。除了武装冲突之外,这些交战团体互相蔑视,诽谤,指责对方背叛,在仇恨言论的话语中使用词语和短语。这种仇恨词汇在示威活动和社交媒体上得到了体现。8个月后,卡扎菲去世了,他花了40年时间建立的政治体系崩溃了。但战争并没有停止:昨天的盟友变成了敌人,争夺政治和经济利益。随着不同的氏族、部落和城市加入争夺个人利益的行列,竞争团体的数量不断扩大。在利比亚起义期间首次使用的策略和技术在内战中得到了应用,并且今天仍然很明显。每个民兵都有一个Facebook页面,拥有一个电视台,或者可以访问一个。这些媒体被广泛用于传播仇恨言论,扩大邻国之间的裂痕,制造难民和国内流离失所者。在起义期间,至少有五个城市变成了鬼城。当亚文化概念首次出现在社会学文献中时,它指的是根据一套偏离主流社会的价值观和规范行事的群体成员。回顾一下民兵成员及其支持者在社交媒体或电视上发表的言论,很明显,这些言论已经演变成仇恨言论,在利比亚人中间造成了社会分裂。这种语言在利比亚创造了一套新的价值观和规范,与之前存在的主流利比亚文化不同。这种新语言创造了一种仇恨的亚文化,它有助于维持和加速利比亚内部的持续分裂,同时进一步分裂该国的社会结构。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Role of Armed Conflict in Developing a Subculture of Hate and its Consequences
When Libyan youth took to the streets in a populist uprising in 2011, which became known as the 17 February 2011 revolution, many Libyans thought they were on the verge of removing one of the most vicious dictators of the twentieth century, Muammar Gaddafi, and building a new democratic state. Gaddafi responded forcefully, hoping to eliminate the movement in its infancy. But clashes between Gaddafi’s forces and those who took to streets soon turned into a civil war, during which Libyan society was split into two major groups: one supporting the uprising, the other the regime. In addition to armed conflict, these warring groups regarded each other with contempt, generated slander, and accused each other of betrayal, using words and phrases in a discourse of hate speech. This vocabulary of hate manifested in demonstrations and social media. Eight months later Gaddafi was dead, and the political system he built over four decades collapsed. But the war did not stop: yesterday’s allies became enemies, competing for political and economic gains. The number of contesting groups expanded as different clans, tribes, and cities joined the fray for personal gains. Strategies and techniques first used during the Libyan uprising were applied in the civil war, and are still manifest today. Every militia has a Facebook page, owns a television station, or has access to one. These media have been widely used to spread hate speech and to widen the rift between neighbors, creating refugees and internally displaced people. At least five cities became ghost towns during the uprising. When the concept of subculture first appeared in the sociological literature, it referred to members of a group that behaved according to a set of values and norms that deviated from those of mainstream society. Reviewing the language of militia members and their supporters that is articulated in social media or on television, it becomes obvious that such language has devolved into hate speech, creating social fragmentation among Libyans. This language has created a new set of values and norms in Libya that are different from preexisting mainstream Libyan culture. The new language has created a subculture of hate, which serves to sustain and accelerate continuing divisions within Libya, while further fragmenting the social fabric of the country.
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来源期刊
Contemporary Arab Affairs
Contemporary Arab Affairs Social Sciences-Cultural Studies
CiteScore
0.70
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0.00%
发文量
16
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