Konstruksi, Kontestasi, Fragmentasi, dan Pluralisasi Otoritas Keagamaan Indonesia Kontemporer

Anggi Afriansyah

Abstract


Noorshahril Saat and Ahmad Najib Burhani (eds). 2020. The New Santri: Challenges to Traditional Religious Authority in Indonesia. Singapore: ISEAS Yusuf Ishak Institute.

After the New Order, religious movements become increasingly popular both offline and online. The internet has become a medium for disseminating ideas and practices of religious patterns that are different from traditional religious authorities. On the other hand, there are increasing opportunities for transnational religious movements seeking to build their influence in Indonesia. Another interesting phenomenon is the presence of New Santri coming to color the world of da’wah in Indonesia through new media. Through this book, the authors try to explain the phenomena that are happening in the struggles for religious authority in Indonesia. This book describes at least three factors that significantly influence recent religious competitions, namely: globalization, post-Reformation democratization (after 1998), and the growth of various private television channels and social media users. These three factors have a strong impact in shaping and internalizing the construction, contestation, fragmentation, and pluralization of contemporary Indonesian religious authorities.


Keywords


New Santri; Indonesia; Muslim; Religious Authority

Full Text:

PDF

References


Alatas, Ismail Fajrie. 2016. “Aligning the Sunna and the Jama’a: Religious Authority and Islamic Social Formation in Contemporary Central Java, Indonesia.” Ph.D. Dissertation. University of Michigan.

Birchok, Daniel Andrew. 2016. “Women, Genealogical Inheritance and Sufi Authority: The Female Saints of Seunagan, Indonesia.” Asian Studies Review 40(4): 583–99.

Burhani, Ahmad Najib. 2018. “Plural Islam and Contestation of Religious Authority in Indonesia.” In Islam in Southeast Asia: Negotiating Modernity, ed. Norshahril Saat. Singapore: ISEAS-Yusof Ishak Institute.

George, Cherian. 2017. “Pelintiran Kebencian: Rekayasa Ketersinggungan Agama dan Ancamannya bagi Demokrasi. Jakarta: Pusat Studi Agama dan Demokrasi (PUSAD), Yayasan Paramadina.

Halimatusa’diyah, Iim. 2020. “Beragama di Dunia Maya: Media Sosial dan Pandangan Keagamaan di Indonesia.” PPIM UIN Jakarta. https://ppim.uinjkt.ac.id/download/beragama-di-dunia-maya-media-sosial-dan-pandangan-keagamaan-di-indone/ (April 22, 2021).

Hasan, Noorhaidi. 2006. “Laskar Jihad: Islam, Militancy, and the Quest for Identity in Post-New Order Indonesia”. Ithaca: Cornell Southeast Asia Program.

Hefner, Claire-Marie. 2016. “Models of Achievement: Muslim Girls and Religious Authority in a Modernist Islamic Boarding School in Indonesia.” Asian Studies Review 40(4): 564–82.

Hicks, Jacqueline. 2014. “Heresy and Authority: Understanding the Turn against Ahmadiyah in Indonesia.” South East Asia Research 22(3): 321–39.

Husein, Fatimah, and Martin Slama. 2018. “Online Piety and Its Discontent: Revisiting Islamic Anxieties on Indonesian Social Media.” Indonesia and the Malay World 46(134): 80–93.

Ichwan, Moch. Nur. 2013. “Towards a Purtitanical Moderate Islam: The Majelis Ulama Indonesia and the Politics of Religious Orthodoxy”. In Contemporary Developments in Indonesia Islam: Explaining the “Convervative Turn”, edited by Martin Van Bruinessen. Singapore: Institute of Southeast Asian Studies.

Ismah, Nor. 2016. “Destabilising Male Domination: Building Community-Based Authority among Indonesian Female Ulama.” Asian Studies Review 40(4): 491–509.

Kersten, Carol. 2015. “Islam in Indonesia: The Contest for Society, Ideas and Values”. London: Hurst & Company.

Kloos, David. 2016. “The Salience of Gender: Female Islamic Authority in Aceh, Indonesia.” Asian Studies Review 40(4): 527–44.

Makin, Al. 2018. “‘Not a Religious State’: A Study of Three Indonesian Religious Leaders on the Relation of State and Religion.” Indonesia and the Malay World 46(135): 95–116.

Nisa, Eva F. 2018. “Social Media and the Birth of an Islamic Social Movement: ODOJ (One Day One Juz) in Contemporary Indonesia.” Indonesia and the Malay World 46(134): 24–43.

Rumadi, Rumadi. 2012. “Islam dan Otoritas Keagamaan.” Walisongo: Jurnal Penelitian Sosial Keagamaan 20(1): 25–54.

Salahudin et al. 2020. “Islamic Political Polarisation on Social Media During the 2019 Presidential Election in Indonesia.” Asian Affairs 51(3): 656–71.




DOI: https://doi.org/10.36712/sdi.v28i1.20514 Abstract - 0 PDF - 0

Refbacks

  • There are currently no refbacks.


Creative Commons License
All publication by Studia Islamika are licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License.

Studia Islamika, ISSN: 0215-0492, e-ISSN: 2355-6145

View My Stats