只有希腊人参加奥运会?重新考虑在“泛希腊”运动会中禁止非希腊人参赛的规定

Sofie Remijsen
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引用次数: 6

摘要

本文认为,所谓的“泛希腊”运动会从未有过将非希腊人排除在外的规则。自19世纪以来,这种规则的存在已经被接受,当时国籍的概念在理解希腊方面发挥了更大的作用。最近关于希腊身份和种族的学术研究表明,这些都是灵活的,不断重新谈判的概念,共同的文化和在避难所和游戏中形成的网络在这一谈判过程中发挥了重要作用。现在不仅可以不借助排他规则来理解奥林匹亚和其他圣所在希腊认同形成中的作用,而且认同的灵活性也使它实际上不可能实施这样的规则。这篇论文首先重新考虑了亚历山大一世在奥林匹亚的著名事件——假定规则的中心来源文本——并提出了一些关于hellanodikai角色的常见假设。有人认为,这一来源虽然为公元前5世纪的民族话语提供了见解,但实际上并不能证明存在反对非希腊人参与的一般规则。第二节调查了主要大学入学程序的证据,包括招收男孩和排斥奴隶。城邦公民的登记,通常被认为与希腊人的要求有关,将在第三节中更详细地讨论,这将论证这种登记是罗马时期的一项创新,并不是为了意识形态原因而限制准入。第四部分通过波利比乌斯的一段话说明,尽管奥运会具有包容性,但种族紧张局势仍可能投射到奥运会上。
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Only Greeks at the Olympics? Reconsidering the Rule against Non-Greeks at 'Panhellenic' Games
This paper argues that the so-called “Panhellenic” games never knew a rule excluding non-Greeks from participation. The idea that such a rule existed has been accepted since the nineteenth century, when the idea of nationality played a much stronger role in the understanding of Greekness. Recent scholarship on Greek identity and ethnicity has shown that these were flexible and consta ntly renegotiated concepts and that the shared culture performed and the networks formed at sanctuaries and games played an important role in this negotiation process. Not only can the role of Olympia and other sanctuaries in the formation of Greek identit y now be understood without having recourse to a rule of exclusion, the flexible nature of identity also would have made it virtually impossible to the implement such a rule. The paper starts by reconsidering the well - known episode about Alexander I at Olympia – the central source text for the supposed rule – and addresses some common assumptions about the role of the hellanodikai . It is argued that this source, while offering insights in to the ethnic discourse of the fifth century BC, does not actually pro ve the existence of a general rule against the participation of non-Greeks. Section two surveys the evidence for admission procedures at major agones , including the admission of boys and the exclusion of slaves. The registration of polis citizenship, often assumed to be connected to the requirement of being Greek, will be addressed in more detail in section three, which will argue that such a registration was an innovation of the Roman period, and did not aim at the limitation of admission for ideological r easons. Section four illustrates, by means of a passage from Polybius, how tensions about ethnicity could still be projected on the Olympics despite their inclusive nature.
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