军国主义与贝都因人:阿拉伯海湾殖民主义、性别和种族的交叉

IF 2.8 1区 社会学 Q1 INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS Security Dialogue Pub Date : 2021-11-11 DOI:10.1177/09670106211054902
H. Al-Noaimi
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引用次数: 1

摘要

本文以贝都因人的军事化表现及其诗歌传统为切入点,考察了阿拉伯海湾军国主义的发展。这篇文章追溯了贝都因人的“军事男子气概”和贝都因人文化被英国殖民主义和后殖民民族主义侵占和改造的方式,从而在海湾地区产生了不同寻常的军国主义模式。它解决了国际关系和安全研究文献中的一个空白,在这些文献中,军国主义是通过以国家为中心和方法论的民族主义框架来研究的,这些框架在很大程度上忽视了跨国和殖民历史。文章认为,卡塔尔和阿拉伯联合酋长国对军国主义的当代表现应该与殖民主义如何通过将贝都因人矛盾地描述为“军事种族”而在海湾地区引发军国主义联系起来解读,贝都因人的军事性也被视为殖民/后殖民国家的安全“威胁”。军事化的反应和理性在海湾社会中通过“贝都因人战士”的刻板印象而正常化,这种刻板印象是一种永恒而固定的结构,将海湾支离破碎的过去与当今环境联系起来。值得注意的是,“贝都因人战士”的刻板印象有助于培养一种信念,即稳定和历史连续性是卡塔尔和阿拉伯联合酋长国国家现代化进程的基础。这篇文章的干预试图通过观察军国主义及其军事结构如何造成国家轨迹的断裂来破坏这种连续性,以1996年政变企图、公民罢免和诗歌行为的非政治化为例,证明军国主义给阿拉伯湾的贝都因人带来了特别的不安全感。
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Militarism and the Bedouin: Intersections of colonialism, gender, and race in the Arab Gulf
This article investigates the development of militarism in the Arab Gulf using the militarized representation of the Bedouin and their poetic tradition as a site for its analysis. The article traces the ways in which Bedouin ‘martial masculinities’ and Bedouin culture have been appropriated and transformed by British colonialism and postcolonial nationalisms to produce unusual patterns of militarism within the Gulf. It addresses a gap in international relations and security studies literature, in which militarism is examined through state-centric and methodologically nationalist framings that largely overlook transnational and colonial histories. The article argues that contemporary displays of militarism by Qatar and the United Arab Emirates should be read in relation to how colonialism engendered militarism across the Gulf region through the paradoxical representation of the Bedouin as a ‘martial race’ whose martial-ness was also seen as a security ‘threat’ for the colonial/postcolonial state. Militarized responses and rationalities were normalized within Gulf society through the ‘Bedouin warrior’ stereotype, which served as a timeless and fixed construct, connecting the Gulf’s disjointed past to its present-day context. Significantly, the ‘Bedouin warrior’ stereotype helps foster the belief that stability and historical continuity underpin state-modernization processes in Qatar and the United Arab Emirates. The article’s intervention seeks to disrupt this continuity by looking at how militarism and its martial constructs created ruptures in state trajectories, using the example of the 1996 coup attempt, citizen revocations, and the depoliticization of the poetic act as evidence for the claim that militarism engenders particular insecurities for Bedouin populations in the Arab Gulf.
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来源期刊
Security Dialogue
Security Dialogue INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS-
CiteScore
6.10
自引率
6.20%
发文量
19
期刊介绍: Security Dialogue is a fully peer-reviewed and highly ranked international bi-monthly journal that seeks to combine contemporary theoretical analysis with challenges to public policy across a wide ranging field of security studies. Security Dialogue seeks to revisit and recast the concept of security through new approaches and methodologies.
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