Search the Products Store

Search the Book Store

Religious Book Store Index

Home







Religious Book Store > Religious books beginning with P

More details of book titled: A Peaceful Jihad: Negotiating Identity and Modernity in Muslim Java (Contemporary Anthropology of Religion)

A Peaceful Jihad: Negotiating Identity and Modernity in Muslim Java (Contemporary Anthropology of Religion)

Author: Ronald Lukens-Bull
Published: 2005-05-13
List price: $31.95
Our price: $31.95
Usually ships in 24 hours
As of: January 08th, 2009 02:31:18 PM
Customer comments on this selection.

Religious Is Peaceful Jihad possible?
Ronald Lukens-Bull's book Peaceful Jihad is one of the most recent ethnographic attempts to understand Indonesian Islam. The major topic addressed in this ethnography is how the process of modernity has been innovatively and selectively modified by Muslims in Indonesia (especially east Javanese)to reconstruct their own unique forms of Islam. In this work, Lukens-Bull recognizes the early pioneering understandings of Indonesian Islam by Geertz as too limited in representing Islam as a thin lacquer spread over the Hindu-Buddhist cultural fundamentals. Geertz had viewed Indonesian Islam as a struggle between the Santri, an urban, modernist strain of Islam, versus the rural traditionalist or popular syncretic abangan believers. Lukens-Bull building on the research of more contemporary anthropologists such as John Bowen, Robert Hefner, Suzanne Brenner, Mark Woodward has shown that these early Geertzian categories were too crude. Lukens-Bull has added to this anthropological research by focusing on the dynamics of the Islamic schools in east Java known as pesantren. He did in-depth research in the 1990s on how the Islamic teachers and leaders within the pesantren were incorporating the political and symbolic-cultural matrix into the curriculum. Lukens-Bull describes how various symbols of Sufism, modernity, and secular elements were drawn into the debates about what ought to be incorporated into the curriculum within the pesantren. He also adds an interesting postmodern reflexive insight into this process by illuminating how a particular Sufi leader used him as a Westerner as an example to the students of how to purify and dissolve incorrect "Christian" teachings from his consciousness.
Lukens-Bull goes beyond the reformist/modernity-traditionalist dynamic within Islam to demonstrate how these young students were weaving their understandings of secularism, political economy issues, and so-called "clashes of Asian-Islamic civilization with the West to construct and drive new forms of non-secularized and spiritualized forms of modernity. He draws on Robert Bellah and Anthony Giddens as sociologists as well as anthropologists such as Arjun Appadurai to discuss these new forms of modernity.
In the final chapter, Lukens-Bull defines the contours of this "Peaceful Jihad" as represented within the voices of these young students in contrast to the terrorist movements of Jemaah Islamiyah (JI) or Laskar Jihad. He suggests that the culturally deep seated Sufi tradition as maintained within the pesantren communities of east Java provides a basis for constructing an Islamic identity that is distinctive from these radical militant forms of Islam.
Lukens-Bull ends his discussion of Indonesian Islam with perspicuous questions that have relevance when thinking about the Western political and cultural strategies in respect to Muslims. These questions involve whether we in the West can accept forms of pluralism, civil society, democracy, and human rights that have emerged in regions such as Indonesia as equivalent to our own understandings of these processes and institutions. Or must we project and impose our own Western forms of these processes and institutions in areas with much different histories and cultural developments.
This book ought to be read by anyone interested in understanding Islam beyond sweeping generalities based on the reading of religious texts or the testimony of so-called terrorism experts, or superficial media accounts. In-depth ethnographic understandings of Islam like Lukens-Bull's study help provide a richer and more detailed comprehensive understanding than most superficial media coverage of the Muslim world.

Raymond Scupin
Anthropology and International Studies
Lindenwood University
Rscupin@lindenwood.edu


Similar Listings

Book cover of Islam and the State in Indonesia.Islam and the State in Indonesia
Book cover of Schooling Islam: The Culture and Politics of Modern Muslim Education (Princeton Studies in Muslim Politics).Schooling Islam: The Culture and Politics of Modern Muslim Education (Princeton Studies in Muslim Politics)
Book cover of Peyote Hunt: The Sacred Journey of the Huichol Indians (Symbol, Myth & Ritual).Peyote Hunt: The Sacred Journey of the Huichol Indians (Symbol, Myth & Ritual)
Book cover of Across The Boundaries Of Belief: Contemporary Issues In The Anthropology Of Religion.Across The Boundaries Of Belief: Contemporary Issues In The Anthropology Of Religion
Book cover of Black American Students in An Affluent Suburb: A Study of Academic Disengagement (Sociocultural, Political, and Historical Studies in Education).Black American Students in An Affluent Suburb: A Study of Academic Disengagement (Sociocultural, Political, and Historical Studies in Education)
Our Religious book picks:


Search the Religious Products Store
Keywords:   


LCS Amazon Store 2.5 © 2009