Open Access
Religion and Modernization in Southeast Asia (Book Review)
Author(s) -
Sudarnoto Abdul Hakim
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
buletin al-turas
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2579-5848
pISSN - 0853-1692
DOI - 10.15408/bat.v2i4.6873
Subject(s) - modernization theory , buddhism , islam , indigenous , southeast asia , politics , sociology , social science , perspective (graphical) , political science , ethnology , law , theology , philosophy , ecology , artificial intelligence , computer science , biology
the book which was written by Fred. R. Vonder Mehden, an Albert Thomas Professor of Political Science, at Rice University, Houston, is actually a result of efforts to understand the nature of th interrelationship of religion and modernization in Southeast Asia in the light of the theoritical assumptions presented by postwar social scientists. It is no doubt that where as religions like Islam and Buddhism in countries such as Malaysia, Indonesia, and Thailand have acted both as inhibutors and agents of change, the social science literature spoke primarily to the negative role of rligion from the more possitive perspective. Mehden demonstrates the weakness of the theories developed by Social scientists in Western Europe and the U.S. without adequate field research and embodying major biases and misconceptionabout indigenous cultures and religions.