Islamic Modernities in Southeast Asia: Exploring Indonesian Popular and Visual Culture
By (Author) Leonie Schmidt
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Rowman & Littlefield International
25th May 2017
United Kingdom
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Popular culture
Human geography
305.69709598
Hardback
218
Width 158mm, Height 239mm, Spine 23mm
522g
What does it mean to be a modern Muslim today In contemporary discourse Islam and modernity are often presented as each others opposites in media and popular culture. Southeast Asia has a large Muslim population, especially in Indonesia, Malaysia, and Singapore, but Islamic culture in these states is conspicuously absent from the wider global discourse on Islam. With a focus on popular culture in Indonesia a country that houses the worlds largest Muslim population and that is also undergoing modernisation Islamic Modernities in Southeast Asia will demonstrate how Islamic modernities are being negotiated and constructed through popular and visual culture from a trans-regional perspective. Looking at a variety of Islamic-themed popular and visual culture including rock music, cinema, art, visual decorations in shopping malls, self-help books, and fashion blogs, the book explores how Islamic modernities are imagined, negotiated, contested, and shared in Southeast Asia.
Examining Islamic modernities and popular culture in Indonesia, Leonie Schmidt considers such diverse topics as visual culture, soap opera, cinema, fashion, rock music and urban space. In a region that is simultaneously Islamising and modernising, Schmidt shows how the juxtaposition of the seemingly incompatible can unsettle the modern/traditional dichotomy and highlight national and religious identities in their engagement with emerging modern lifestyle possibilities. Schmidts exciting and ambitious book is an important contribution to continuing debates about cultural transformation, pluralism and the promise of Islamic modernity. -- Chris Hudson, Associate Professor of Asian Media and Culture, RMIT University
Required reading, for those craving to understand Southeast Asias newborn halal chic. Using the latest in cultural theory, Schmidt takes us on a journey through late capitalist Indonesia, where political dtente, new media technologies and religious pop compellingly combine, thus exploring the various new and exhilarating faces of a public Islam that increasingly serves a generation of Muslims, young and old, in making oneself modern. -- Bart Barendregt, Associate Professor, Leiden University, the Netherlands
Leonie Schmidt is Assistant Professor in television studies in the Media Studies Department at the University of Amsterdam and a researcher at the Amsterdam School for Cultural Analysis.