Hearing Allah's Call: Preaching and Performance in Indonesian Islam
Hearing Allah's Call: Preaching and Performance in Indonesian Islam
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Abstract
For many Muslims throughout the world, oral preaching provides the most accessible and enjoyable medium for learning about Islam and its meanings for everyday life. This is true in Indonesia’s West Java province, where almost 98% of the population of around forty-three million practices Islam. Despite its popularity, Indonesia’s Islamic elites are concerned about the value of preaching. They see that Islam provides directives and motivations towards progress in areas of social and political concern, but argue that this progress will not be achieved if Muslims are satisfied with the pleasing artifice of clever preachers. Millie spent fourteen months in the company of some of West Java’s most successful Islamic preachers, but also spent time with critics of listening. He described and explores a dichotomy between Islamic speech which succeeds because it is shaped to suit listeners’ social realities, and discourses about Muslim subjectivity that connect media consumption with aspirations for social and political progress, and which portray listening as anachronistic and inefficacious. This detailed analysis sheds light on a question that is increasingly important in efforts to understand contemporary Muslim societies: What is the place of pious listening in the complex societies of today?
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Front Matter
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Introduction
- 1 Preaching Diversity in Bandung
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2
The Unique Voice … and Its Travails
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3
Preaching “without Performing”
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4
The Languages of Preaching in the Islamic Public Sphere
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5
The Listening Audience Laughs and Cries, the Writing Public Thinks
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6
A Feminized Domain
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7
Public Contest and the Pragmatics of Performance
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8
Standing Up for Listening
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Conclusion
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End Matter
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