卡塔尔的网络基督教:COVID-19的“移民”和“外籍”神学

Q1 Social Sciences Journal of Arabian Studies Pub Date : 2021-07-03 DOI:10.1080/21534764.2021.1979472
I. Promodh
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引用次数: 1

摘要

2020年,新冠肺炎疫情给波斯湾地区的日常生活造成了严重破坏。然而,对于非公民如何应对这种无情地暴露了他们的短暂性和不稳定性的病毒,人们知之甚少。本文讨论了当地应对COVID-19的一个被忽视的方面,即非公民如何从神学上理解病毒。利用现有的关于海湾地区网络宗教和移民宗教的学术研究,我研究了非公民的一个独特子集的神学反应——卡塔尔的五旬节派灵恩派基督徒。我的方法植根于数字人种学方法,使我发现了低收入“移民”和高收入“外籍人士”对COVID-19的不同神学反应。低收入的“移民”寻求精神疗法来对抗他们认为的人造病毒,而高收入的“外国人”则在他们认为是神圣考验的过程中努力追求精神上的完美。通过研究这些不同的神学反应,我认为,在疫情期间,“移民”和“外籍人士”都与东道国建立了更强的亲和关系,因为他们在网上建立了新的精神社区形式。
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Cyber-Christianity in Qatar: “Migrant” and “Expat” Theologies of COVID-19
Abstract In the year 2020, COVID-19 wreaked havoc on everyday life in the Persian Gulf. Yet little is known about how non-citizens responded to a virus that inexorably exposed their transience and precarity. This article addresses a much-neglected aspect of local responses to COVID-19, namely, how non-citizens made sense of the virus theologically. Drawing on existing scholarship on cyber religion and migrant religiosity in the Gulf, I examine the theological responses of a distinctive subset of non-citizens –– Pentecostal-Charismatic Christians in Qatar. My approach, rooted in digital ethnographic methods, led me to uncover divergent theological responses to COVID-19 among lower-income “migrants” and higher-income “expats”. Lower-income “migrants” sought spiritual remedies to counter what they deemed to be a man-made virus, whereas higher-income “expats” strove for spiritual perfection during what they believed was a divine trial. Working through these divergent theological responses, I argue that both “migrants” and “expats” built stronger affinities to their host state during the pandemic as they developed new forms of spiritual communitas online.
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来源期刊
Journal of Arabian Studies
Journal of Arabian Studies Social Sciences-Cultural Studies
CiteScore
0.90
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