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Indonesia’s New Muslim Intellectuals
Author(s) -
Kersten Carool
Publication year - 2009
Publication title -
religion compass
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.113
H-Index - 1
ISSN - 1749-8171
DOI - 10.1111/j.1749-8171.2009.00187.x
Subject(s) - islam , binary opposition , realisation , modernity , muslim world , intellectualism , indonesian , opposition (politics) , islamic studies , sociology , gender studies , vanguard , religious studies , context (archaeology) , political science , history , law , theology , epistemology , philosophy , ancient history , physics , linguistics , archaeology , quantum mechanics , politics
In recent years, there has been a growing appreciation among scholars with an interest in contemporary Muslim thought for the contributions by Indonesia’s new Muslim intellectuals. The realisation that Indonesians are in the vanguard of a significant rethinking of the place of religion in the present‐day Islamic world is helped by the progress in the research on Southeast Asian Islam and resultant corrections of the received knowledge of its place in the context of the wider Muslim world. While in the existing literature this new Indonesian Muslim intellectualism is closely associated with ‘neomodernists’ belonging to the first generation coming of age in the postcolonial era, I propose to regard it rather as part of a discursive development traversing three generational shifts embedded in an increasingly articulate understanding of Indonesia as an integral part of the Muslim world and Islam as a constitutive element in Indonesian culture. These new Muslim intellectuals, who pair an intimate familiarity with the Islamic tradition to an equally solid knowledge of advances in the Western human sciences, are exponents of an emergent cosmopolitan Islam in which the dichotomy between ‘Islam’ and ‘Other’ or the binary opposition ‘tradition’ versus ‘modernity’ collapse. Most recently it has culminated in a generation of articulate young Muslims exploring the possibilities of hybrid forms of ‘liberal Islam’ and ‘post‐traditionalist Islam’.