“Tokowa po ya ekolo”:刚果军队中的军事机构

D. Lakika, Ryan Essex
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引用次数: 0

摘要

这篇文章探讨了在约翰内斯堡作为难民生活的前刚果士兵的身体概念。这篇文章借鉴了在南非约翰内斯堡进行的广泛的实地调查,并采用了去领土化和再领土化的概念来解释那些决定加入刚果军队的人的身体。这篇文章揭示了军队操纵士兵身体的复杂方式,以产生不同的连接、联合和移除(或断开)线。我们支持士兵的遗体不一定归国家所有,但士兵的遗体归军事机构所有,这些机构用民族主义的言辞来证明他们的存在和行动是正当的。参军的行为可以被认为是切断与平民生活的联系,加入一个个人融入军事文化的新世界的一种方式。通过启蒙,士兵的身体被重新界定;它变成了国家资产。虽然这项研究的重点是前刚果士兵,但它具有更广泛的相关性,可以深入了解士兵如何看待他们的身体从个人占有转变为作为国家身体的重新领土化。
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“Tokowa po ya ekolo”: The Military Body Within the Congolese Army
This article explores the conceptualization of the body among former Congolese soldiers living as refugees in Johannesburg. The article draws on extensive fieldwork in Johannesburg, South Africa and employs the concept of deterritorialization and reterritorialization to explain the bodies of those who have decided to join the Congolese Army. The article reveals the complex ways in which the army manipulates soldiers’ bodies to generate diverse lines of connection, coalition, and removal (or disconnection). We support that the soldiers’ bodies are not necessarily owned by the country, but that soldiers’ bodies become owned by military institutions, who employ nationalist rhetoric to justify their existence and actions. The act of joining the army could be considered a way of cutting ties with civilian life and joining a new world in which the individual is socialized into military culture. Through initiation, the soldier’s body is reterritorialized; it becomes a national asset. While this study focuses on former Congolese soldiers, it has broader relevance, giving insight into how soldiers perceive their body shifting from individual possession to be reterritorialized as the body of the nation.
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