鬼魂的流动:南非低地的幽灵之旅

I. Niehaus
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摘要

在对南部非洲的研究中,祖先和附身的灵魂受到的关注远远超过鬼魂。只是在最近几年,关于鬼魂的零碎资料才开始出现在民族志记录中。在这篇文章中,我试图通过记录南非低地与鬼魂相遇的故事和叙述来纠正这种不平衡。我把对亚洲和其他地方鬼魂的研究作为解释它们的社会和宇宙学意义的分析起点。在这些文学作品中,一个广为流传的理论是,鬼魂的叙述是一种安置方式,将人们与地方联系起来。但这一理论并没有捕捉到南非低草原的叙事方式,即把鬼魂描绘成本质上是流动的生物。这一点在高速公路上消失的搭便车者和一个叫sauwe的鬼魂的描述中最为明显,它占据了人们的思想,迫使他们朝墓地的方向走去。这些叙述讲述的是流离失所、幽灵之旅和路线,而不是稳定的地点。这些幽灵提醒人们,未能照顾那些遭受暴力死亡的人的灵魂,并将他们带回家。但我们也可以将它们视为过去不公正和暴力的痕迹,以及村民自己流离失所的历史经历的镜子,这些经历是种族隔离时代强迫迁移和移民劳动制度的标志。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
On the mobility of ghosts: spectral journeys in the South African lowveld
Abstract In studies of Southern Africa, ancestors and possessing spirits have received far greater attention than ghosts. It is only in recent years that fragmentary references to ghosts have begun to appear in the ethnographic record. In this article, I seek to redress this imbalance by documenting stories and accounts of encounters with ghosts in the South African lowveld. I turn to studies of ghosts in Asia and elsewhere as an analytical starting point for interpreting their social and cosmological significance. A widespread theory in this literature is that narratives of ghosts are a means of emplacement, connecting people to places. But the theory does not capture the way in which narratives in the South African lowveld depict ghosts as essentially mobile beings. This is most evident in accounts of vanishing hitchhikers on the highways and of a ghost called sauwe, which captures people’s minds and forces them to walk in the direction of graveyards. These narratives speak of displacement, of spectral journeys and of routes rather than stable locations. The apparitions serve as reminders of the failure to take care of the spirits of those who suffered violent deaths and bring them home. But we can also see them as traces of past injustices and of violence in a haunted landscape, and as mirrors of villagers’ own historical experiences of displacement, experiences that were a hallmark of forced removals and of the migrant labour system during the apartheid era.
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