The Social Scientific Study of Islam in Indonesia: A 75 Year Retrospective

Robert W. Hefner

Abstract


This essay provides an historical overview of broad currents in the social scientific study of Islam in Indonesia from the Modjokuto project of the early 1950s to today. It makes three broad points. First, the essay shows that a perennial influence on the refiguration of Muslim politics and ethics in Indonesia has been, not scriptural principles alone, but the global ascendance of the modern nation state and Muslim intellectuals’ and politicians’ efforts to craft a Muslim public ethics consonant with the realities of a modern and religiously plural nation. Second, the essay shows that another feature of the social scientific study of Islam in Indonesia has been the ascendance of Indonesia-born Muslim intellectuals to positions of intellectual leadership in the field. Third, the overview makes clear that one of the most important recent achievements of this social scientific research has been to explain how Indonesia succeeded in developing the most effective and sustainable democracy in the Muslim-majority world.

Keywords


Muslim Politics; Democracy; Citizenship; Jurisprudence; Islamic Reform; Mass-Based Religious Associations

References


Abdillah, Masykuri. 1997. Responses of Indonesian Muslim Intellectuals to the Concept of Democracy (1966-1993). Hamburg: Abera Verlag Meyer & Co.

Abdullah, Najwa and Mohamed Nawab Mohamed Osman. 2018. “Islamisation in the Indonesian Media Spaces: New Sites for a Conservative Push.” Journal of Religious and Political Practice 4:3, pp. 214-232.

Abdullah, Taufik. 1971. Schools and Politics: The Kaum Muda Movement in West Sumatra (1927-1933). Ithaca: Modern Indonesia Project, Southeast Asia Program, Cornell University.

Ahmed, Shahab. 2016. What is Islam? The Importance of Being Islamic. Princeton and Oxford: Princeton University Press.

Alatas, Ismail Fajrie. 2021. What is Religious Authority: Cultivating Islamic Communities in Indonesia. Princeton and Oxford: Princeton University Press.

Alexander, Jennifer. 1987. Trade, Traders and Trading in Rural Java. Singapore: Oxford University Press.

Alfian. 1989. Muhammadiyah: The Political Behavior of a Muslim Modernist Organization Under Dutch Colonialism. Yogyakarta: Gadjah Mada University Press.

Al-Qurtuby, Sumanto. 2016. Religious Violence and Conciliation in Indonesia: Christians and Muslims in the Moluccas. London and New York: Routledge.

Aragon, Lorraine V. 2000. Fields of the Lord: Animism, Christian Minorities, and State Development in Indonesia. Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press.

Aryanti, Tutin. 2013. “Shame and Borders: The ‘Aisyiyah’s Struggle for Muslim Women’s Education in Indonesia.” In Z. Gross, L. Davies, and Al-Khansaa Diab, eds., Gender, Religion, and Education in a Chaotic Postmodern World, pp. 83-93. New York: Springer.

Avonius, Leena. 2004. “Reforming Wetu Telu: Islam, Adat, and the Promises of Regionalism in Post-New Order Lombok.” Leiden: Ph.D. Dissertation, Department of Anthropology, Leiden University.

Ayoob, Mohammed and Danielle N. Lussier. 2020. The Many Faces of Political Islam: Religion and Politics in Muslim Societies. Second Edition. Ann Arbor: Univeresity of Michigan Press.

Azca, Muhammad Najib, Hairus Salim, Moh Zaki Arrobi, Budi Asyhari, and Ali Usman. 2019. Dua Menyemai Damai: Peran dan Kontribiusi Muhammadiyah dan Nahdlatul Ulsma dalam Perdamaian dan Demokrasi. Yogyakarta: Pusat Studi Keamanan dan Perdamaian, Universitas Gadjah Mada.

Azra, Azyumardi. 2004 (orig. 1992). “The Transmission of Islamic Reformism to Indonesia: Networks of Middle Eastern and Malay Indonesian Ulama in the Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries.” New York: Ph.D. Dissertation, Department of History, Columbia University.

Azra, Azyumardi, Dina Afrianty, and Robert W. Hefner. 2007. “Pesantren and Madrasa: Muslim Schools and National Ideals in Indonesia.” In Robert W. Hefner and Muhammad Qasim Zaman, eds., Schooling Islam: The Culture and Politics of Modern Muslim Education,pp. 172-198. Princeton: Princeton University Press.

Bagir, Zainal Abidin. 2020. “ ‘Kepercayaan’ dan ‘Agama’ dalam Negara Pasca-Reformasi.” Prisma 38:1, pp. 41-52.

Bamualim, Chaider S. 2015. “Negotiating Islamisation and Resistance: A Study of Religions, Politics and Social Change in West Java from the Early 20th Century to the Present.” Leiden: Ph.D. Disseertation, University of Leiden.

Barton, Greg. 2002. Abdurrahman Wahid: Muslim Democrat, Indonesian President; A View from the Inside. Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press.

Beatty, Andrew. 1999. Varieties of Javanese Religion: An Anthropological Account. Cambridge Studies in Social and Cultural Anthropology. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

Bertrand, Jacques. 2004. Nationalism and Ethnic Conflict in Indonesia. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

Bowen, John R. 2003. Islam, Law, and Equality in Indonesia: An Anthropology of Public Reasoning. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.

______. 1993. Muslims through Discourse: Religion and Ritual in Gayo Society. Princeton: Princeton University Press.

Brankley Abbas, Megan. 2021. Whose Islam? The Western University and Modern Islamic Thought in Indnesia. Stanford: Stanford University Press.

Brenner, Suzanne April. 1998. The Domestication of Desire: Women, Wealth, and Modernity in Java. Princeton: Princeton University Press.

Bruinessen, Martin van. 2008. “Traditionalist and Islamist Pesantrens in Contemporary Indonesia.” In Farish A. Noor, Yoginder Sikand, and Martin van Bruinessen, eds., The Madrasa in Asia: Political Activisim and Transnational Linkages, pp. 217-245. Amsterdam: University of Amsterdam Press.

______. 1999. “Global and Local in Indonesian Islam.” Southeast Asian Studies 37:2, pp. 46-33.

Bruinessen, Martin van, Julia Day Howell, eds. 2007. Sufism and the “Modern” in Islam. London and New York: I.B. Tauris.

Buehler, Michael. 2016. The Politics of Shari’a Law: Islamist Activists and the State in Democratizing Indonesia. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

Burhani, Ahmad Najib. 2019. Menemani Minoritas: Paradigma Islam tentang Keberpihakan dan Pembelaan kepada yang Lemah. Jakarta: Kompas Gramedia.

______. 2017. “Geertz’s Trichotomy of Abangan, Santri, and Priyayi: Controversy and Continuity.” Journal of Indonesian Islam 11:2, pp. 329-49.

Carey, Peter. 2008. The Power of Prophecy: Prince Dipanagara and the End of an Old Order in Java, 1785-1855. Second Edition. Leiden: KITLV Press.

Cederroth, Sven. 1981. The Spell of the Ancestors and the Power of Mekkah: A Sasak Community on Lombok. Göteborg, Sweden: Acta Universitatis Gothoburgensis.

Cesari, Jocelyne. 2021. “Political Islam: More than Islamism.” In Jocelyne Cesari, ed., Political Islam in World Politics, pp 1-10. Basel, Switzerland: MDPI.

Daniels, Timoth P. 2009. Islamic Spectrum in Java. Surrey, UK: Ashgate.

Dewey, Alice G. 1962. Peasant Marketing in Java. New York: Free Press of Glencoe.

Dobbin, Christine. 1983. Islamic Revivalism in a Changing Economy: Central Sumatra, 1784-1847. London and Malmo: Scandinavian Institute of Asian Studies Monograph No. 49, Curzon Press.

Duncan, Christopher R. 2014. Violence and vengeance: religious conflict and its aftermath in eastern Indonesia. Singapore: NUS Press.

Eickelman, Dale F. and James Piscatori. 1996. Muslim Politics. Princeton: Princeton University Press.

Eickelman, Dale F., and Jon W. Anderson, eds. 1999. New Media in the Muslim World: The Emerging Public Sphere. Bloomington: Indiana University Press.

Feener, R. Michael. 2007. Muslim Legal Thought in Modern Indonesia. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

Feener, R. Michael and Mark E. Cammack, eds. 2007. Islamic Law in Contemporary Indonesia: Ideas and Institutions. Islamic Legal Studies Program, Harvard University. Cambridge: Harvard University Press.

Feillard, Andrée and Rémy Madinier. 2006. La Fin de l’Innocence? L’Islam Indonésien Face à la Tentation Radicale de 1967 à Nos Jours. Paris: Les Indes Savantes.

Formichi, Chiara, ed. 2021. Religious Pluralism in Indonesia: Threats and Opportunities for Democracy. Ithaca and London: SEAP Publications, Cornell University Press.

Fox, James J. 2006. “Austronesian Societies and Their Transformations.” In Peter Bellwood, James J. Fox, and Darrell Tryon, eds., The Austronesians: Historical and Comparative Perspectives. Canberra, Australia: Australian National University E-Press, pp. 229-244.

Fox, Jonathan. 2006. “World Separation of Religion and State into the 21st Century.” Comparative Political Studies 39:5, pp. 536-569.

Geertz, Clifford. 1973. “The Integrative Revolution: Primordial Sentiments and Civil Politics in the New States.” In Clifford Geertz, The Interpretation of Cultures, pp. 255-310. New York: Basic Books.

______. 1965. The Social History of an Indonesian Town. Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press.

______. 1960. The Religion of Java. New York: The Free Press.

Geertz, Hildred. 1961. The Javanese Family: A Study of Kinship and Socialization. Prospect Heights, IL: Waveland Press.

George, Kenneth M. 2010. Picturing Islam: Art and Ethics in a Muslim Lifeworld. Malden, MA and Oxford: Wiley-Blackwell.

Gerakan Pemuda Ansor. 2021. “Gerakan Pemuda Ansor Declaration on Humanitarian Islam.” In Thomas K. Johnson and C. Holland Taylor, eds., pp. 139-148.

Gerakan Pemuda Ansor and Bayt ar-Rahmah. 2018. “The Nusantara Manifesto, Adopted and Promulgated in Yogyakarta, Indonesia, October 2, 2018. https://www.baytarrahmah.org/media/2018/Nusantara-Manifesto.pdf

Hadiz, Vedi R. 2016. Islamic Populism in Indonesia and the Middle East. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

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

Hasyim, Syafiq. 2021. “MUI and Its Discursive Relevance for ‘Aksi Bela Islam’: A Growing Trend of Islamic Conservatism in Indonesia.” In Leonard C. Sebastian et., al, pp. 116-131.

Hefner, Robert W. 2024. Islam and Citizenship in Indonesia: Democracy and the Quest for an Inclusive Public Ethics. New York and London: Routledge.

______. 2019. “Whatever happened to civil Islam? Islam and democratization in Indonesia, 20 years on.” Asian Studies Review https://doi.org/10.1080/10357823.2019.1625865.

______. 2018. “Introduction: Indonesia at the Crossroads--Imbroglios of Religion, State, and Society in an Asian Muslim Nation.” In Robert W. Hefner, ed., Routledge Handbook of Contemporary Indonesia, pp. 3-30. New York and London: Routledge

______. 2011. “Where Have All the Abangan Gone? Religionization and the Decline of Non-Standard Islam in Contemporary Indonesia.” In Michel Picard and Remy Madinier, eds., The Politics of Religion in Indonesia: Syncretism, Orthodoxy, and Religious Contention in Java and Bali (London and New York: Routledge). pp. 71-91.

______. 2009. “Islamic Schools, Social Movements, and Democracy in Indonesia.” In Robert W. Hefner, ed., Making Modern Muslims: The Politics of Islamic Education in Southeast Asia, pp. 55-105. Honolulu: University of Hawai’i Press.

______. 2000. Civil Islam: Muslims and Democratization in Indonesia. Princeton: Princeton University Press.

______. 1990. The Political Economy of Mountain Java: An Interpretive History. Berkeley: University of California Press.

______. 1987. “Islamizing Java? Religion and Politics in Rural East Java.” Journal of Asian Studies 46:3 (August): 533-54.

______. 1985. Hindu Javanese: Tengger Tradition and Islam. Princeton: Princeton University Press.

______. and Zainal Abidin Bagir, eds. 2021. Indonesian Pluralities: Islam, Citizenship, and Democracy. Notre Dame, IN: University of Notre Dame Press.

Herriman, Nicholas. 2012. The Entangled State: Sorcer, State Control, and Violence in Indonesia. New Haven: Yale University Council on Southeast Asian Studies.

Hidayah, Sita. 2012. “The Politics of Religion: The Invention of ‘Agama’ in Indonesia.” Kawistara 2:2, pp. 105-139,

Hodgson, Marshall. 1974. The Venture of Islam: Conscience and History in a World Civilization. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.

Hoesterey, James B. 2017. “Marketing Islam: Entrepreneurial Ethics and the Spirit of Capitalism in Indonesia.” Practical Matters 10, pp. 10-30.

______. 2015. Rebranding Islam: Piety, prosperity, and a self-help Guru. Stanford: Stanford University Press.

______. 2012. “Prophetic Cosmopolitanism: Islam, Pop Psychology, and Civic Virtue in Indonesia.” City and Society 24:1, pp. 38-61.

Hurriyah. 2023. “Politik Kebebasan Beragama Kelompok Minoritas di Indonesia: Kasus Komunitas Sunda Wiwitan di Kuningan dan Syiah di Sampang.” Ph.D. Dissertation. Jakarta: Program Studi Doktoral Sosiologi, Universitas Indonesia.

Husein, Fatimah. 2005. Muslim-Christian Relations in the New Order Indonesia: The Exclusivist and Inclusivist Muslims’ Perspectives. Bandung: Mizan.

Jabali, F. and Jamhari, eds. 2002. IAIN & Modernisasi Islam di Indonesia [The State Islamic Institutes and the Modernization of Islam in Indonesia]. Jakarta: Logos Wacana Ilmu.

Jackson, Elisabeth and Bahrissalim. 2007. “Crafting a New Democracy: Civic Education in Indonesian Islamic Universities.” Asia Pacific Journal of Education 27:1, pp. 41-54.

Jamhari. 2000. Popular Voices of Islam: Discourse on Muslim Orientations in South Central Java. Ph.D. Thesis. Canberra, Australia: Department of Anthropology, Australian National University.

Jay, Robert W. 1963. Religion and Politics in Rural Central Java. Cultural Report Series No. 12, Program in Southeast Asian Studies. New Haven: Yale University.

Karim, Wazir Jahan. 1995. “Bilateralism and Gender in Southeast Asia.” In Wazir Jahan Karim, ed., “Male” and “Female” in Developing Southeast Asia, pp. 35-74. Oxford: Berg.

Kersten, Carool. 2017. A History of Islam in Indonesia: Unity in Diversity. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press.

______. 2015. Islam in Indonesia: The Contest for Society, Ideas, and Values. London: Hurst and Company.

Kim, Hyung-Jun. 1996. “Reformist Muslims in a Yogyakarta Village: The Islamic Transformation of Contemporary Socio-Religious Life.” Canberra, Australia: Ph.D. Thesis, Department of Anthropology, Australian National University.

Kingsley, Jeremy. 2010. “Tuan Guru, Community and Conflict in Lombok Indonesia.” Melbourne, Australia: Ph.D. Thesis, Melbourne Law School, University of Melbourne.

Kipp, Rita Smith. 1993. Dissociated Identities: Ethnicity, Religion, and Class in an Indonesian Society. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press.

Kloos, David and Ward Berenschot. 2017. “Citizenship and Islam in Malaysia and Indonesia.” In Ward Berenschot, Henk S. Nordholt and Laurens Bakker, eds., Citizenship and Democratization in Southeast Asia, pp. 178-207. Leiden: Brill.

Kuru, Ahmet T. 2019. Islam, Authoritarianism, and Underdevelopment: A Global and Historical Comparison. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

Laffan, Michael. 2011. The Makings of Indonesian Islam: Orientalism and the Narration of a Sufi Past. Princeton, NJ and Oxford, UK: Princeton University Press.

______. 2003. Islamic Nationhood and Colonial Indonesia: The Umma Below the Winds. London and New York, RoutledgeCurzon.

Lindsey, Tim. 2012. Islam, Law and the State in Southeast Asia. Vol. I: Indonesia. London and New York: I.B. Tauris.

Liow, Joseph Chinyong. 2016. Religion and Nationalism in Southeast Asia. Cambridge and New York: Cambridge University Press.

Lukens-Bull, Ronald. 2005. A Peaceful Jihad: Negotiating Identity and Modernity in Muslim Java. New York: Palgrave MacMillan.

Lussier, Danielle N. and M. Steven Fish. 2012. “Indonesia: The Benefits of Civic Engagement.” Journal of Democracy 23:1, pp. 70-84.

Machmudi, Yon. 2021. “The PKS and Tarbiyah Movement: Its Agenda and Future in Indonesia.” In Leonard C. Sebastian, Syafiq Hasyim, and Alexander R. Arifianto, eds., Rising Islamic Conservatism in Indonesia: Islamic Groups and Identity Politics, pp. 153-80. Oxford and New York: Routledge.

______. 2006. “Islamising Indonesia: The Rise of Jemaah Tarbiyah and the Prosperous Justice Party (PKS).” Canberra: Ph.d. Dissertation, Faculty of Asian Studies, Australian National University.

Makin, Al. 2017. “Homogenizing Indonesian Islam: Persecution of the Shia Group in Yogyakarta.” Studia Islamika 24:1, pp. 1-32.

Menchik, Jeremy. 2016. Islam and democracy in Indonesia: Tolerance without Liberalism. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

Moensma, Stephen V. and J. Christopher Soper. 1997. The Challenge of Pluralism: Church and State in Five Democracies. Lanham (Md.): Rowman and Littlefield.

Mujiburrahman. 2006. “Feeling Threatened: Muslim-Christian Religions in Indonesia’s New Order.” Ph.D. Thesis. Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press.

Mulkhan, Abdul Munir. 2000. Islam Murni dalam Masyarakat Petani. Yogyakarta: Bentang Budaya.

Mutaqin, Z.Z. 2014. “Penghayat, Orthodoxy, and the Legal Politics of the State: The Survival of Agama Djawa Suna (Madraisism) in Indonesia.” Indonesia and the Malay World 42:122, pp. 1-23.

Mu’ti, Abdul and Azaki Khoirudin. 2019. Pluralisme Positif: Konsep dan Implementasi dalam Pendidikan Muhammadiyah. Jakarta: Universitas Muhammadiyah Jakarta.

Nahdlatul Ulama. 2019. “The Nusantara Manifesto.” In Hasil-Hasil Musyawarah Naational ‘Alim Ulama Nahdlatul Ulama 2019. Jakarta: Nahdlatul Ulama Central Board. https://www.baytarrahmah.org/media/2018/Nusantara-Manifesto.pdf

______. 2017. “Nahdlatul Ulama Targets the Weaponization of Religion for Political Purposes.” https://baytarrahmah.org/2017_11_25_nu-national-assembly-and-conference/

______. 2016. “2016 05 10 ISOMIL Nahdlatul Ulama Declaration.” https://www.baytarrahmah.org/media/political-communiques/2016/2016_05_10_ISOMIL-NU-Declaration/2016_05_10_ISOMIL-NU-Declaration.pdf

Nakamura, M. 2012. The Crescent Arises over the Banyan Tree: A Study of the Muhammadiyah Movement in a Central Javanese Town, c. 1910s-2010. 2nd Enlarged Edition. Singapore: ISEAS Press.

Nurish, Amanah. 2019. Agama Jawa: Setengah Abad Pasca Clifford Geertz. Yogyakarta: LKiS Publishers.

Peacock, James L. 1978. Muslim Puritans: Reformist Psychology in Southeast Asian Islam. Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press.

Pepinsky, Thomas B., R. W. Liddle, and Saiful Mujani. 2018. Piety and Public Opinion: Understanding Indonesian Islam. New York: Oxford University Press.

Picard, Michel and Remy Madinier, eds. 2011. The Politics of Religion in Indonesia: Syncretism, Orthodoxy, and Religious Contention in Java and Bali. London and New York: Routledge.

Pranowo, Bambang. 1993. “Creating Islamic Tradition in Rural Java.” Melbourne, Australia: Ph.D. Thesis, Department of Anthropology and Sociology, Monash University.

Rasmussen, Anne K. 2010. Women, the Recited Qur’an, and Islamic Music in Indonesia. Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press.

Ricci, Ronit. 2011. Islam Translated: Literature, Conversion, and the Arabic Cosmopolis of South and Southeast Asia. Chicago and London: University of Chicago Press.

Ricklefs, M.C. 2012. Islamisation and Its Opponents in Java: c. 1930 to the Present. Singapore: NUS Press.

Rinaldo, Rachel. 2013. Mobilizing Piety: Islam and Feminism in Indonesia. New York: Oxford University Press.

Robinson, Kathryn. 2009. Gender, Islam and Democracy in Indonesia. London and New York: Routledge.

Ropi, Ismatu. 2012. The Politics of Regulating Religion: State, Civil Society and the Quest for Religious Freedom in Modern Indonesia. Ph.D. Thesis. Canberra, Australia: Australian National University.

Saat, Norshahril and Ahmad Najib Burhani, eds. 2020. The New Santri: Challenges to Traditional Religious Authority in Indonesia. Singapore: ISEAS.

Saeed, Abdullah. 1999. “Towards Religious Tolerance through Reform in Islamic Education: The Case of the State Institute of Islamic Studies of Indonesia.” Indonesia and the Malay World 27:79, pp. 177-179.

Sakai, Minako. 2017. “Still Remembering the Origins.” Indonesia and the Malay World, 45:131, pp. 44-65.

Sakai, Minako. 1999. “The Nut Cannot Forget Its Shell: Origin Rituals among the Gumai of South Sumatra.” Canberra, Australia: Ph.D. Thesis, Department of Anthropology, Australian National University.

Saleh, Fauzan. 2001. Modern Trends in Islamic Theological Discourse in 20th Century Indonesia: A Critical Survey. Leiden: Brill.

Schröter, Susanne. 2013. “Gender and Islam in Southeast Asia: An Overview.” In Susanne Schröter, ed., Gender and Islam in Southeast Asia: Women’s Rights Movements, Religious Resurgence and Local Traditions, pp. 7-52. Leiden: Brill.

Simon, Gregory. M. 2014. Caged in on the Outside: Moral Subjectivity, Selfhood, and Islam in Minangkabau. Honolulu: University of Hawai’i Press.

Slama, Martin. 2017. “A Subtle Economy of Time: Social Media and the Transformation of Indonesia’s Preacher Economy.” Economic Anthropology 4:1, pp. 94-106.

Smith-Hefner, Nancy J. 2019. Islamizing Intimacies: Youth, Sexuality, and Gender in Contemporary Indonesia. Honolulu: University of Hawai’i Press.

Smith Kipp, Rita. 1993. Dissociated Identities: Ethnicity, Religion, and Class in an Indonesian Society. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press.

Sonn, Tamara, ed. 2021. Overcoming Orientalism: Essays in Honor of John L. Esposito. Oxford and New York: Oxford University Press.

Staquf, Yahya Cholil. 2021. “Responding to a Fundamental Crisis within Islam Itself.” In Thomas K. Johnson and C. Holland Taylor, eds., pp. 139-148.

______. 2019. “The Recontextualization of Fiqh (Islamic Law) and the Transformation of the Prevailing ‘Muslim Mindset,’ for the Sake of World Peace and to Achieve a Harmonious Communal Life for All Mankind.” Declaration Adopted by the National Confrence of Nahdlatul Ulama Religious Scholars, Miftahul Huda al-Azhar Islamic Boarding School, Banjar, West Java, Indonesia, 27 February-1 March 2019.

https://www.baytarrahmah.org/media/2019/2019-Munas_The-Recontextualization-of-Fiqh.pdf

Woodward, Mark R. 1989. Islam in Java: Normative Piety and Mysticism in the Sultanate of Yogyakarta. Tucson: University of Arizona Press.

van Doorn-Harder, Pieternella. 2006. Women Shaping Islam: Reading the Qur’an in Indonesia. Urbana and Chicago: University of Illionois Press.

Wahid, Wawan Gunawan Abd, Muhammad Abdullah Darraz, and Ahmad Fuad Fanani. 2015. Fikih Kebinekaan: Pandangan Islam Indonesia Tentang Umat, Kewargaan, dan Kepemimpinan Non-Muslim. Jakarta: Maarif Institut and Mizan.

Winn, Phillip. 2012. “Women’s Majelis Taklim and Gendered Religious Practice in Northern Ambon.” Intersections: Gender and Sexuality in Asia and the Pacific. 30, pp. 1-17.




DOI: https://doi.org/10.36712/sdi.v32i1.45289

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