死亡与道德:对乌干达巴索加人死亡的道德功能的看法

Alexander Paul Isiko, Paulous Serugo
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摘要

毫无疑问,对非洲社会的死亡问题进行了许多研究,尽管这些研究的重点是宗教和精神方面的观点。关于今生和死后之间的精神联系有很多神学化的说法。大多数人文学科的研究都集中在将葬礼和仪式作为向精神世界过渡的手段上。其他人则关注不同的社会如何应对死亡的不幸;通过悲伤,哀悼,选择继承人或继承人以及继承纠纷,这些一直是这种文化公认过程的重要组成部分。死亡在很大程度上被构建为一种挑战和不幸,许多人文学科的学者都关注不同的社会如何定义、感知、处理和应对这场灾难。大多数学术著作对个人死亡所带来的社会价值充耳不闻。其中一个社会价值是定义和塑造死亡发生的社会的道德秩序。以乌干达布索加传统社会为例进行研究。布索加是一个地理上的现实,也是一个文化实体,位于乌干达东部。作者认为,死亡不仅不会影响生命,反而会促进和延续道德价值观,并在另一方面打击破坏社会稳定的恶习。
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Death and morality: perspectives on the moral function of death among the basoga of Uganda
Numerous studies on death in African societies with no doubt have been successfully conducted though their preoccupation has been with the religious and spirituality perspectives. There has been a great deal of theologizing about the spiritual connection between the life here and life after death. Most studies in the humanities have zeroed on burial rituals and rites as means of transition to the spiritual world. Others have concentrated on how different societies cope with the misfortune of death; through grieving, mourning, choosing an heir or heiress and the succession disputes that are always part and parcel of such a culturally acknowledged process. Death is largely constructed as a challenge and misfortune, and many a scholar in the humanities are concerned with how different societies define, perceive, handle and cope with this catastrophe. Most scholarly works have paid a deaf ear to the social value that comes with the demise of an individual. One such social value is the definition and shaping of moral order in society, in which death occurs. Busoga traditional society of Uganda is used as the case study. Busoga is both a geographical reality and cultural entity, found in the eastern part of Uganda. The authors argue that rather than militating life, death promotes and perpetuates moral values on one hand and discourages vices that destabilize society on the other.
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37
审稿时长
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