ABSTRACT

Home to approximately one-fifth of the world’s Muslim population, Indonesia and Malaysia are often overlooked or misrepresented in media discourses about Islam. Islam is a religion but there is also a popular culture, or popular cultures of Islam that are mass mediated, commercialized, pleasure-filled, humorous, and representative of large segments of society. During the last forty years, popular forms of Islam, targeted largely towards urbanized youth, have played a key role in the Islamisation of Indonesia and Malaysia. This book focuses on these forms and the accompanying practices of production, circulation, marketing, and consumption of Islam. Dispelling the notion that Islam is monolithic, militaristic, and primarily Middle Eastern, the book emphasizes its dynamic, contested, and performative nature in contemporary South East Asia. Written by leading scholars alongside media figures, such as Rhoma Irama and Ishadi SK, the case studies although not focused on theology per se, illuminate how Muslims (and non-Muslims) in Indonesia and Malaysia make sense of their lives within an increasingly pervasive culture of Islamic images, texts, film, songs, and narratives.

chapter 1|17 pages

Introduction

The study of Islam and popular culture in Indonesia and Malaysia

part |63 pages

Commercial, educational, government, and religious institutions

chapter 3|14 pages

Multiple Islams, multiple modernities

Art cinema in between nationhood and everyday Islam in Bangladesh and Malaysia

chapter 4|23 pages

Upgraded piety and pleasure

The new middle class and Islam in Indonesian popular culture

part |61 pages

Social processes of media production, circulation, and reception

chapter 6|22 pages

The Internet, cyber-religion, and authority

The case of the Indonesian Liberal Islam Network

chapter 7|22 pages

“Sex sells, or does it?”

Discourses of sex and sexuality in popular women's magazines in contemporary Indonesia

part |47 pages

Islamic perspectives on film, music, and literature

part |63 pages

Representations, values, and meanings

chapter 12|17 pages

Taking liberties

Independent filmmakers representing the tudung in Malaysia

chapter 13|23 pages

Holy matrimony?

The print politics of polygamy in Indonesia

chapter 14|22 pages

14 Pop, politics and piety

Nasyid boy band music in Muslim Southeast Asia