作为时间崩溃的政治认同:埃塞俄比亚联邦制和有争议的欧加登历史

IF 1.9 1区 社会学 Q1 AREA STUDIES African Affairs Pub Date : 2023-02-04 DOI:10.1093/afraf/adad003
Daniel K. Thompson, N. Matshanda
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引用次数: 0

摘要

自20世纪80年代以来,对非洲政治身份的分析一直强调身份操纵是一种治理工具。然而,在非洲之角的索马里,政客们重塑身份的努力面临着对家谱作为身份和政治动员的关键组成部分的僵化理解。本文探讨了政府在埃塞俄比亚联邦种族体系中构建新的“埃塞俄比亚-索马里”身份的努力如何与重新解释氏族谱系和历史的尝试纠缠在一起。我们的重点是努力修改更广泛的欧加登索马里部族群体中的部族历史,并追踪这些修改与殖民主义遗产以及对欧加登身份的普遍理解有关的可能性和局限性。根据实地调查和档案研究,我们表明,围绕索马里人与埃塞俄比亚融合的政治斗争围绕着索马里的宗族关系展开,但这种宗族关系并不像人们经常描述的那样是一种机械的动员工具。我们认为,系谱关系并不等同于政治忠诚,但系谱话语提供了一个框架,通过这个框架,各种行动者通过将历史分解为现在来重新解释当代事件,从而赋予氏族、种族和民族身份以政治意义。
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Political Identity as Temporal Collapse: Ethiopian Federalism and Contested Ogaden Histories
Since the 1980s, analyses of African political identities have emphasized identity manipulation as a governance tool. In the Somali Horn of Africa, however, politicians’ efforts to reinvent identities confront rigid understandings of genealogical clanship as a key component of identity and political mobilization. This article explores how government efforts to construct a new ‘Ethiopian–Somali’ identity within Ethiopia’s ethnic-federal system are entangled with attempts to reinterpret clan genealogies and histories. We focus on efforts to revise the history of clans within the broader Ogaden Somali clan group and trace the possibilities and limits of these revisions in relation to legacies of colonialism as well as popular understandings of Ogaden identity. Drawing on fieldwork and archival research, we show that political struggles over Somalis’ integration with Ethiopia orient around Somali clanship, but that clanship is not a mechanical tool of mobilization, as it is often portrayed. We suggest that genealogical relatedness does not equate to political loyalty, but genealogical discourse provides a framework by which various actors reinterpret contemporary events by collapsing history into the present to imbue clan, ethnic, and national identities with political significance.
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来源期刊
African Affairs
African Affairs Multiple-
CiteScore
4.30
自引率
17.90%
发文量
37
期刊介绍: African Affairs is published on behalf of the Royal African Society. It publishes articles on recent political, social and economic developments in sub-Saharan countries. Also included are historical studies that illuminate current events in the continent. Each issue of African Affairs contains a substantial section of book reviews, with occasional review articles. There is also an invaluable list of recently published books, and a listing of articles on Africa that have appeared in non-Africanist journals.
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