脆弱是一个过时的概念吗?After Subjects and Spaces

IF 0.7 Q3 ANTHROPOLOGY Annals of Anthropological Practice Pub Date : 2020-02-22 DOI:10.1111/napa.12132
Elizabeth K. Marino, A.J. Faas
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引用次数: 43

摘要

大约40年来,脆弱性理论构成了灾难人类学的概念核心。然而,在灾难学者和社区领袖中,有一种不安的暗流,他们担心,用白话来表达脆弱性可能会侮辱与我们一起工作的个人和社区,以及/或我们认同的人。越来越多的人感到不安的是,对“脆弱”行为进行分类,会在话语上抹掉无处不在的“韧性”、坚韧和天才,这些都存在于习惯性暴露于风险和危害的社区中。我们认为,将脆弱性构建为次等民族和边缘化地区的特征,往好了说就是被截断了,往坏了说就是使暴力——认知、符号学和物质——永久化。我们认为,识别“弱势群体”必然是一个异化和本质化的过程。我们看到并关注进一步鼓励一种新兴形式的灾难人类学,这种人类学特别倾向于理解和理论化构成风险的机构、系统和个人,并在此过程中将注意力从“弱势群体”上转移开来。令我们惊讶的是,这在最近的人类学著作中以非常特殊的方式出现了。我们发现,我们的同事在灾难机构和当地社区的交汇处写作,他们的方向远离弱势群体。在这里,我们认识到脆弱性不仅被认为是产生负面结果的历史不平等,而且是为乌托邦未来的不同愿景而斗争的嵌套和有争议的场所,对于构成风险的不同表达,以及对善的不同文化逻辑。
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Is Vulnerability an Outdated Concept? After Subjects and Spaces

Theories of vulnerability have constituted the conceptual core of the anthropology of disaster for roughly 40 years. Yet, there is an undercurrent of disquiet among disaster scholars and community leaders who worry that vernacular uses of vulnerability can be insulting to individuals and communities with whom we work, and/or with whom we identify. There is a growing discomfort that categorizing the “vulnerable” acts to discursively nullify the everywhere-visible “resilience,” toughness, and genius that exist in communities that are habitually exposed to risk and hazards. We argue that constructing vulnerability as a characteristic of subaltern peoples and marginalized places is truncated at best and can perpetuate violence—epistemic, semiotic, and material—at worst. To identify the “vulnerable” is, we contend, necessarily a process of otherizing and essentializing. We see and are concerned to further encourage an emergent form of disaster anthropology that is particularly oriented toward understanding and theorizing the institutions, systems, and individuals that structure risk, and in the process to focus attention away from “the vulnerable.” To our surprise, this has emerged in recent anthropological writings in very particular ways. We find the orientation away from vulnerable populations among our colleagues who write at the intersections of disaster institutions and local communities. Here, we recognize vulnerability conceived not merely as historical inequity that produces negative outcomes, but as nested and contested sites of struggle for different visions of utopian futures, for contrasting articulations of what constitutes risk, and for diverse cultural logics of the good.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.90
自引率
14.30%
发文量
21
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