Regulating the family through religion Secularism, Islam, and the politics of the family in contemporary Turkey

被引:11
|
作者
Kocamaner, Hikmet [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ North CarolinaWilmington, Dept Anthropol, Osprey Hall 1018G,601 S Coll Rd, Wilmington, NC 28403 USA
关键词
STATE; WOMEN; DISCOURSE; AUTHORITY; KINSHIP;
D O I
10.1111/amet.12836
中图分类号
Q98 [人类学];
学科分类号
030303 ;
摘要
Under Turkey's neoconservative government, the Directorate of Religious Affairs deploys state-employed religious functionaries to provide Sunni Muslim citizens with advice and guidance on family life. By inculcating government-sanctioned sensibilities and dispositions related to kinship, these Islamic authorities have become instrumental to extending state power into the domestic lives of the religious majority. This particular entwinement of religion with state power is no aberration. Indeed, the Turkish case reveals a contradiction that lies at the heart of secular governance: the continuing involvement of religion in the politics of the family despite the assumed separation of religion and politics. Secular states may appropriate religious discourses and authority in regulating intimacy and the family while aligning these with biopolitical rationalities, as well as with secular laws and expertise. [secularism, kinship, family, intimacy, governmentality, the state, expertise, Islam, Turkey]
引用
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页码:495 / 508
页数:14
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