The Nakba in a Livestream: Empathic Encounters and the Solidarity of Shared Precariousness

IF 3.5 2区 社会学 Q1 INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS International Political Sociology Pub Date : 2020-11-20 DOI:10.1093/ips/olaa012
Michal Givoni
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

Since the summer of 2015, hundreds of Arab Palestinians from Israel have joined the massive number of volunteers who flocked to Greece and other locations in Europe to assist refugees from Syria, Iraq, Afghanistan, and other countries. Based on their stories about their experiences of volunteering, this essay examines how the affective regime of humanitarian action in crises mutates when such action is practiced by ordinary people who are living through their own protracted political crisis. Focusing on the empathy that Palestinian volunteers have practiced in their encounters with refugees, I show that the Palestinian relief actions and the solidarity of shared precariousness they embody challenge the premises of Western humanitarianism but also complicate the picture sketched by studies on “other humanitarianisms” from beyond the Western and universalist frame. I claim that empathy—one of the main humanitarian resources the Palestinian helpers have mobilized—has prompted a composite sense of affinity in which the similarities between the helpers and the refugees were both stressed and qualified. This affinity, as I further show, draws not just on the helpers’ traumatic memories and cultural and ethnic affiliations but also on their fears of the future.
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生活流中的Nakba:移情遭遇和共同不稳定的团结
自2015年夏天以来,数百名来自以色列的阿拉伯裔巴勒斯坦人加入了大批志愿者的行列,他们涌向希腊和欧洲其他地方,帮助来自叙利亚、伊拉克、阿富汗和其他国家的难民。基于他们志愿服务的经历,本文探讨了当生活在自己旷日持久的政治危机中的普通人采取人道主义行动时,危机中人道主义行动的情感机制是如何发生变化的。关注巴勒斯坦志愿者在遇到难民时所表现出的同理心,我表明,巴勒斯坦的救援行动及其所体现的对共同不稳定的团结挑战了西方人道主义的前提,但也使西方和普世主义框架之外的“其他人道主义”研究所描绘的图景复杂化。我声称,同情——巴勒斯坦援助者动员的主要人道主义资源之一——促使人们产生了一种复合的亲密感,在这种亲密感中,援助者和难民之间的相似之处既有压力,也有资格。正如我进一步展示的那样,这种亲和力不仅利用了帮助者的创伤记忆、文化和种族背景,还利用了他们对未来的恐惧。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.80
自引率
12.50%
发文量
23
期刊介绍: International Political Sociology (IPS), responds to the need for more productive collaboration among political sociologists, international relations specialists and sociopolitical theorists. It is especially concerned with challenges arising from contemporary transformations of social, political, and global orders given the statist forms of traditional sociologies and the marginalization of social processes in many approaches to international relations. IPS is committed to theoretical innovation, new modes of empirical research and the geographical and cultural diversification of research beyond the usual circuits of European and North-American scholarship.
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