2011
En-Chieh Chao
- Doctoral Candidate
- Boston University
Abstract
The much-heeded “Islamization” of current Indonesia is compounded by a concomitant, yet largely unknown, story of Pentecostal proliferation. How do Pentecostals trumpet their messages under the expanding Islamic doxa? What are the mutual impacts between religious movements? This study tackles theses questions and further examines the dynamic of religious pluralism realized in new gendered subjectivities. It contends that religious women’s practices have embodied distinctive forms of religiosity and sharply reconfigured gender, morality, racial hierarchies, and religious divides of Javanese society. Attending to the lives of women and minorities within and between the religious movements in Java, this study scrutinizes the often-overlooked nexus of gender, inter-subjectivity, and cross-religions relations.