话语机会与思想的跨国传播:奥姆事件后日本的“洗脑”与“精神控制”。

Rin Ushiyama
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引用次数: 3

摘要

作为思想社会学的一个案例研究,本文完善了“话语机会”理论,以研究知识分子的主张如何跨越国家和语言的界限,在缺乏学术可信度的情况下获得公众的关注。“洗脑”和“精神控制”的理论最初起源于20世纪60年代的美国,作为对新兴宗教运动增长的回应。几十年后的1995年3月,在日本,新兴宗教奥姆真理教在东京地铁使用沙林毒气,造成13人死亡后,所谓的“邪教”“被洗脑”或“精神控制”信徒的说法变得非常突出。从那时起,洗脑/精神控制一直是围绕“奥姆真理教事件”的公共话语的中心,尽管它们在学术话语中的地位存在争议。本文提出了两个论点。首先,洗脑/精神控制从美国到日本的跨国传播是1995年东京沙林袭击的直接结果,这为活动人士在公开辩论中成功传播这些理论提供了“话语机会”。其次,洗脑/精神控制在日本公共话语中取得成功,主要是因为它们的规范内容,因为这些理论将“洗脑/精神控制邪教”视为对公民社会的邪恶、暴力和亵渎的威胁。
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Discursive opportunities and the transnational diffusion of ideas: 'brainwashing' and 'mind control' in Japan after the Aum Affair.
A case study in the sociology of ideas, this article refines the theory of 'discursive opportunities' to examine how intellectual claims cross national and linguistic boundaries to achieve public prominence despite lacking academic credibility. Theories of 'brainwashing' and 'mind control' originally began in the United States in the 1960s as a response to the growth of new religious movements. Decades later in Japan, claims that so-called 'cults' 'brainwashed' or 'mind controlled' their followers became prominent after March 1995, when new religion Aum Shinrikyō gassed the Tokyo subway using sarin, killing thirteen. Since then, brainwashing/mind control have both remained central in public discourse surrounding the 'Aum Affair' despite their disputed status within academic discourse. This article advances two arguments. Firstly, the transnational diffusion of brainwashing/mind control from the US to Japan occurred as a direct result of the 1995 Tokyo sarin attack, which acted as a 'discursive opportunity' for activists to successfully disseminate the theories in public debate. Secondly, brainwashing/mind control became successful in Japanese public discourse primarily for their normative content, as the theories identified 'brainwashing/mind controlling cults' as evil, violent and profane threats to civil society.
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