民族、宗教和神学:当我们说“成为吉尔吉斯人就意味着成为穆斯林”时,我们是什么意思?

V. Artman
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引用次数: 1

摘要

研究中亚的学者经常把宗教和民族认同联系在一起:“成为吉尔吉斯人(或乌兹别克人、哈萨克人等)就是穆斯林。”然而,民族-国家认同与宗教之间的关系是如何构建和理解的,这方面的具体方式还没有得到充分的研究。“作为穆斯林”不仅仅是一个种族标记:它可以暗示一系列不同的,甚至可能是相互竞争的,与民族身份有不同关系的神学。根据2014年在吉尔吉斯斯坦进行的田野调查,本文通过对两种伊斯兰话语:吉尔吉斯民族传统主义和吉尔吉斯国家和宗教当局推动的规范的马图里迪哈纳菲主义进行比较分析,探讨了作为吉尔吉斯人和穆斯林意味着什么。呈现出来的是一幅复杂而多样的宗教图景,在这幅图景中,作为吉尔吉斯人和穆斯林的意义不断受到质疑和重新协商。
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Nation, Religion, and Theology: What Do We Mean When We Say “Being Kyrgyz Means Being Muslim?”
Scholars of Central Asia often view religion and ethno-national identity as being linked: “to be Kyrgyz (or Uzbek, Kazakh, etc.) is to be Muslim.” The specific ways in which the relationship between ethno-national identity and religion is constructed and understood, however, have not been adequately researched. “Being Muslim” is not merely an ethnic marker: it can imply a range of different, perhaps even competing, theologies with different relationships to national identity. Drawing on fieldwork conducted in Kyrgyzstan in 2014, this article investigates the question of what it means to be Kyrgyz and to be Muslim by undertaking a comparative analysis of two Islamic discourses: Kyrgyz ethno-national traditionalism and the normative Maturidi Hanafism promoted by the Kyrgyz state and the religious authorities. What emerges is a portrait of a complex and variegated religious landscape, one in which the meaning of being Kyrgyz and Muslim is continually questioned and renegotiated.
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