我们的姐妹和女儿:巴基斯坦印度教移民的男子气概和对印度公民身份的数字要求

IF 1.3 3区 社会学 Q3 DEMOGRAPHY Journal of Immigrant & Refugee Studies Pub Date : 2022-04-03 DOI:10.1080/15562948.2022.2032906
Natasha Raheja
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引用次数: 1

摘要

摘要本文探讨了印度教移民难民男子如何使用数字智能手机应用WhatsApp,根据他们在巴基斯坦作为宗教少数群体被排斥的经历,集体申请印度公民身份。根据长期的数字和面对面的民族志,我探索了巴基斯坦印度教移民难民男性通常交换年轻印度教女性图像的方式,据报道,这些女性是作为与穆斯林男性结婚的一部分而被迫皈依的。这些图片在WhatsApp上的传播促进了移民难民男性之间基于共同脆弱性的同性恋社会联系,这与印度肌肉发达的印度教男子气概形成了鲜明对比。此外,男性在移民程序中分享WhatsApp的图片,将其作为巴基斯坦宗教和种姓迫害的证据。男性在社交媒体上交流图片,调动受伤的男子气概,促进了巴基斯坦印度教政治社区的发展。我认为,在印度教占多数的印度,这些交流取决于性别等级制度,这些制度塑造了移民对公民身份的父权要求。
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Our Sisters and Daughters: Pakistani Hindu Migrant Masculinities and Digital Claims to Indian Citizenship
Abstract This article examines how Hindu migrant-refugee men use the digital smartphone application WhatsApp to make collective claims on Indian citizenship based on their experiences of exclusion as a religious minority in Pakistan. Drawing on long-term digital and in-person ethnography, I explore the ways that Pakistani Hindu migrant-refugee men commonly exchange images of young Hindu women, reportedly forcefully converted as part of marriages to Muslim men. The circulation of these images on WhatsApp facilitates homosocial bonds between migrant-refugee men based on a shared vulnerability, in contrast with dominant configurations of a muscular Hindu masculinity in India. In addition, men share images from WhatsApp in immigration proceedings, mobilizing them as evidence of religious and caste-based persecution in Pakistan. Mobilizing a wounded masculinity, men’s exchange of images on social media fosters a Pakistani Hindu political community. I argue that these exchanges hinge on gendered hierarchies that shape migrants’ patriarchal claims to citizenship in Hindu majoritarian India.
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3.50
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