卡拉塔的三代:达吉斯坦集体向全球伊斯兰宗教社区的转变

Q3 Arts and Humanities Anthropology and Archeology of Eurasia Pub Date : 2017-10-02 DOI:10.1080/10611959.2017.1450553
D. Sokolov
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引用次数: 2

摘要

本文描述了俄罗斯北高加索达吉斯坦共和国卡拉塔山村社会的变迁。在苏联时期,由一个以亲属团体为导向的伊斯兰社区组织成一个集体农场,到后苏联时期,其安迪语民族被分裂为山村、达赫斯坦-马哈奇卡拉的首都、达赫斯塔尼平原上的平原村庄、俄罗斯联邦的其他城市以及远近的国外。本分析侧重于卡拉塔三代人社会、宗教和政治组织的变化,从20世纪40年代出生在山区的人到80年代至90年代出生在城市的人。伴随着这一代人的转变,卡拉塔人的身份被伊斯兰身份所取代——对于年轻一代卡拉塔人,即所谓的第二代城市人来说,包括叙利亚圣战在内的全球伊斯兰议程,比20世纪60年代和70年代出生的卡拉塔人对村庄的担忧更为密切。
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Three Generations of Karata: The Transformation of a Daghestani Collective into a Global Islamic Religious Community
The article describes transformations of the mountain village society of Karata, in the republic of Daghestan, in Russia’s North Caucasus. In the Soviet period organized into a collective farm from a kin-group oriented Islamic community, by the post-Soviet period its Andi-language people were split among the mountain village, the capital of Daghestan Makhachkala, flatland villages on the Daghestani plain, other cities of the Russian Federation, and the near and far abroad. This analysis focuses on changes in the social, religious, and political organization of Karata in the course of the three generations, from those born in the 1940s in the mountains to those born in the 1980s–90s who grew up in cities. This change of generations is accompanied by the replacement of a Karata identity with an Islamic one—for the younger generation of Karata people, the so-called second, urban generation, the global Islamic agenda, including jihad in Syria, is closer than the village concerns of Karata people born in the 1960s and 1970s.
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Anthropology and Archeology of Eurasia
Anthropology and Archeology of Eurasia Arts and Humanities-History
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期刊介绍: Anthropology and Archeology of Eurasia presents scholarship from Russia, Siberia, the Caucasus, and Central Asia, the vast region that stretches from the Baltic to the Black Sea and from Lake Baikal to the Bering Strait. Each thematic issue, with a substantive introduction to the topic by the editor, features expertly translated and annotated manuscripts, articles, and book excerpts reporting fieldwork from every part of the region and theoretical studies on topics of special interest.
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