灵魂之镜

Vivek Narayan
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引用次数: 2

摘要

在殖民时代印度南部特拉凡科尔王子国的反种姓斗争历史上,阿瓦纳种姓(奴隶和中间种姓)思考自己的想法的场景反复出现。这些场景代表了我将称之为表演性平等主义的东西,这是日常生活中的重复行为,体现了对殖民地特拉凡科尔非人种姓制度的平等主张。在这篇论文中,我将描述三个场景,它们代表了殖民地喀拉拉邦平等主义话语流动的独特但交织的路线。平等观念在特拉凡科尔产生,首先是通过英国新教传教士的启蒙价值观,或深情的启蒙;第二,作为纳拉亚纳·古鲁的非二元平等,或被重新利用的Adwaita;第三,通过一个名为Ayya Vazhi或激进的Siddha Saiva的泰米尔宗教邪教的话语和实践。通过表演的视角来看待平等主义话语的流动,我展示了剧目中的知识史方法,这使我们能够研究特定的概念框架和话语模式是如何由人们传递、转化和体现的,对他们来说,这些思想实际上是一个生与死的问题。平等或人性等普世与喀拉拉邦反种姓斗争的特殊主张之间有意、富有成效和赋权的关系导致了一种实践政治,我将其描述为重新利用普世。人类概念在殖民时代特拉凡科尔的反种姓政治中的中心地位使我将这些平等主义话语的流动和他们赋予权力的政治斗争称为人类的家谱。总之,我分析了殖民时代特拉凡科尔的人类谱系,重点关注了三个体现表演平等主义的场景:深情的启蒙运动、重新调整用途的Adwaita和激进的Siddha Saiva。
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Mirrors of the Soul
Scenes of avarna castes (slave and intermediate castes) pondering their reflections recur throughout the history of anti-caste struggle in the princely state of Travancore in colonial-era south India. These scenes represent what I will call performative egalitarianisms, which are repetitive enactments in the performance of everyday lives that embody claims to equality against the dehumanizing caste codes of colonial Travancore. In this paper, I will describe three scenes that represent distinct yet intertwined routes for the flows of egalitarian discourses in colonial Kerala. The concept of equality emerged in Travancore, first, via Enlightenment values of the British Protestant missionaries, or soulful Enlightenment; second, as non-dualistic equality of Narayana Guru, or repurposed Advaita; and third, through the discourses and practices of a Tamil religious cult called Ayya Vazhi, or radical Siddha Saiva. In viewing the flows of egalitarian discourse through the lens of performance, I demonstrate the method of intellectual histories in the repertoire which allows us to investigate how particular conceptual frameworks and discursive modes are transmitted, transformed, and embodied by people for whom these ideas are, quite literally, a matter of life and death. The intentional, productive, and empowering relationship between universals such as equality or humanity and the particular claims of anti-caste struggle in Kerala leads to a politics of practice that I describe as repurposing universals. The centrality of the notion of the human in the anti-caste politics of colonial-era Travancore leads me to refer to these flows of egalitarian discourses and the political struggles that they empowered as genealogies of the human. In sum, I analyze the genealogies of the human in colonial-era Travancore by focussing on three scenes exemplifying performative egalitarianisms: soulful Enlightenment, repurposed Advaita, and radical Siddha Saiva.
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