当代约旦的身份政治与民族幽默

Yousef Barahmeh
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摘要

随着中东地区的政治动荡和不稳定,约旦已经成为大量巴勒斯坦人、伊拉克人和叙利亚人的家园,现在也有相当数量的埃及人成为其劳动力。人口多样性的增长不仅对国家的社会和经济产生了影响,而且在身份政治和种族幽默方面也产生了显著影响(土著人民如何看待他人,他人如何看待土著人民?)这可以通过约旦人和巴勒斯坦裔约旦人之间的紧张关系来解释,这种紧张关系是基于约旦社会中城乡分裂的观念而形成的民族幽默。本文的讨论认为,外约旦城镇的居民,如as - salt、At-Tafilah和as - sarih,“意外地”成为安曼和其他地方城市居民的种族笑话的目标,这些人现在占巴勒斯坦裔约旦人的大多数。这些跨约旦的小城镇和村庄的人一直是约旦民族幽默的目标,因为他们落后,缺乏判断力和愚蠢,与聪明,现代,高雅文化的约旦城市居民和他们的文化优越感相比。然而,自2011年阿拉伯之春以来,这些外约旦城镇的人们形成了一种反优势倾向,他们嘲笑城市中心的权势者,嘲笑政府及其关于改革和进步的制度化话语。
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Identity politics and ethnic humour in contemporary Jordan
Following political turbulence and instability in the Middle East, Jordan has become a home for a large number of Palestinians, Iraqis, and Syrians, and now includes a significant number of Egyptians in its workforce. This growing diversity in the population has impacted the country not only socially and economically but quite noticeably in terms of identity politics and ethnic humour (how do indigenous people perceive the other(s) and how do others perceive the indigenous people?). This is explained through the rising tensions between Jordanians and Jordanians of Palestinian origin in relation to the formation of ethnic humour that is based on the idea of urban and rural division in Jordanian society. The discussion in this article argues that the people of Transjordanian towns, such as As-Salt, At-Tafilah, and As-Sarih, have ‘unexpectedly’ become the target of many ethnic jokes by the urbanites in Amman and elsewhere, who now make up the majority of Jordanians of Palestinian origin. The people of these Transjordanian small towns and villages have been the target of Jordanian ethnic humour because of their backwardness, lack of discretion, and stupidity, compared to the cleverness, modernity, and high culture of the Jordanian urbanites and their cultural superiority. However, since the 2011 Arab Spring, the people of these Transjordanian towns have developed a counter-superiority tendency to laugh at the powerful in urban centres and make fun of the government and its institutionalised discourse about reform and progress.
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