西方晚期现代性的身份话语与“阈限空间”概念

IF 0.1 4区 社会学 0 PHILOSOPHY Telos Pub Date : 2023-01-01 DOI:10.3817/0323202103
H. Behr, Felix Rösch
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引用次数: 0

摘要

1. 构建叙事,通过提供一种确定性和坚定感,来对抗人们对归属感的不安,是人类历史上反复出现的一种影响然而,也许变化是这段历史中唯一不变的东西。一百多年前,马克斯·韦伯哀叹向理性现代性的过渡是“世界的幻灭”,这反过来又受到了弗里德里希·席勒在十八世纪末的诗歌《希腊诸神》(Die Götter Griechenlands)中表达的类似担忧的启发人文和社会科学领域的学术辩论日益激烈,人们对生活现实结构的根本变化经历了什么,以及他们如何应对这些变化,这些问题进一步表明,当今西方社会正处于转型之中。然而,对于人类状况是简单地观察变化,还是转变为一个质的新阶段,即所谓的后现代性、晚期现代性和流动现代性,存在分歧然而,学者们一致认为,自19世纪发生“全球转型”以来,当代现实与定义西方社会和归属感的社会想象形成鲜明对比。正如巴里·布赞(Barry Buzan)和乔治·劳森(George Lawson)所主张的那样,这种转变仍然“支撑着当代国际关系的核心方面”即使在今天,社会想象也被用宏大的术语来叙述和批评,通常关注的是国家和一个(无论如何构想的)辉煌的未来。
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Identity Discourses in Western Late Modernity and the Notion of “Liminal Space”
1. Introduction Constructing narratives that can combat people’s unease about their sense of belonging, by providing a sense of certainty and steadfastness, is a recurrent affect in the history of humanity.1 Perhaps change is, however, the only constant in this history. Over a hundred years ago, Max Weber bemoaned the transition to a rationalized modernity as “the disenchantment of the world,”2 which in turn had been inspired by similar concerns expressed by Friedrich Schiller in his poem “The Gods of Greece” (“Die Götter Griechenlands”) at the end of the eighteenth century.3 Intensifying scholarly debates across the humanities and social sciences, asking questions about what people experience as fundamental changes to the fabric of their lived realities and how they cope with it, further indicate that Western societies are in transition in the present day. There is, however, disagreement over whether the human condition simply observes changes or whether it transforms into a qualitatively new stage, one that has been termed postmodernity, late modernity, and liquid modernity.4 Nevertheless, there is a consensus among scholars that contemporary realities unfold in contrast to social imaginaries that have defined Western societies and senses of belonging since the “global transformation” took place in the nineteenth century. This transformation still “underpins core aspects of contemporary international relations,” as Barry Buzan and George Lawson contend.5 Even today, social imaginaries are narrated—and criticized as such—in grand terms, often with a focus on the nation and a (however conceived) glorious future.
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Telos
Telos Multiple-
CiteScore
0.20
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14
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