A right to remoteness? A missing bridge and articulations of indigeneity along an East Siberian railroad.

Peter Schweitzer, Olga Povoroznyuk
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引用次数: 13

Abstract

The Soviet Union and its successor states have been avid supporters of a modernisation paradigm aimed at 'overcoming remoteness' and 'bringing civilisation' to the periphery and its 'backward' indigenous people. The Baikal-Amur Mainline (BAM) railroad, built as a much-hyped prestige project of late socialism, is a good example of that. The BAM has affected indigenous communities and reconfigured the geographic and social space of East Siberia. Our case study, an Evenki village located fairly close to the BAM, is (in)famous today for its supposed refusal to get connected via a bridge to the nearby railroad town. Some actors portray this disconnection as a sign of backwardness, while others celebrate it as the main reason for native language retention and cultural preservation. Focusing on discourses linking the notions of remoteness and cultural revitalisation, the article argues for conceptualising the story of the missing bridge not as the result of political resistance but rather as an articulation of indigeneity, which foregrounds cultural rights over more contentious political claims. Thus, the article explores constellations of remoteness and indigeneity, posing the question whether there might be a moral right to remoteness to be claimed by those who view spatial distance as a potential resource.

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一种远离的权利?东西伯利亚铁路沿线缺失的桥梁和土著居民的发音。
苏联及其继承国一直是旨在“克服偏远”和“将文明”带给周边地区及其“落后”的土著人民的现代化范式的狂热支持者。贝加尔湖-阿穆尔河干线铁路(BAM)就是一个很好的例子,它是社会主义后期一个被大肆宣传的声望项目。BAM影响了土著社区,并重新配置了东西伯利亚的地理和社会空间。我们的案例研究是一个非常靠近BAM的Evenki村庄,它今天因拒绝通过一座桥与附近的铁路城镇连接而闻名。一些演员将这种脱节描述为落后的标志,而另一些人则将其视为保留母语和文化的主要原因。文章聚焦于将偏远和文化复兴的概念联系起来的话语,主张将失去的桥梁的故事概念化,而不是政治抵抗的结果,而是土著的表达,这将文化权利置于更具争议性的政治主张之上。因此,本文探讨了偏远和土著的星座,提出了一个问题,即那些将空间距离视为潜在资源的人是否可能拥有一种道德上的偏远权利。
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