Arnez / Budianta | Gender, Islam and Sexuality in Contemporary Indonesia | Buch | 978-981-99-5658-6 | www.sack.de

Buch, Englisch, 220 Seiten, Format (B × H): 160 mm x 241 mm, Gewicht: 530 g

Reihe: Engaging Indonesia

Arnez / Budianta

Gender, Islam and Sexuality in Contemporary Indonesia


2024
ISBN: 978-981-99-5658-6
Verlag: Springer

Buch, Englisch, 220 Seiten, Format (B × H): 160 mm x 241 mm, Gewicht: 530 g

Reihe: Engaging Indonesia

ISBN: 978-981-99-5658-6
Verlag: Springer


This Open Access book explores the complex interplay between gender, Islam and sexuality in Indonesia, the country with the world's largest Muslim population. The authors offer a fresh look at the tensions between the local and the global through a wide range of cultural expressions and productions, including fashion, Islamic dating, popular literature, and videos on YouTube. The book is grouped around three core themes: sexuality and violence, halal lifestyle, and shame and self-determination. The first section unpacks how activists and progressive religious scholars have argued for the need for the Sexual Violence Bill and it examines the ambivalence between criminalisation and care towards LGBTQ+ people. In the second, the authors bring new insights into how local expressions of Islam, gender and sexuality are negotiated in an increasingly globalised world. The contributions on the third theme tackle gender roles and mobility in culturally diverse regions such as Hong Kong,Taiwan, Singapore, the US, and Indonesia.

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Weitere Infos & Material


Gender, Islam and Sexuality in Contemporary Indonesia: An Overview.- Advocating for Change: Cultural and Institutional Factors of Sexual Violence in Indonesia.- Criminalisation and Care: Indonesian Muslim Mass Organisations’ Perspectives on LGBT People.- On Certification and Beauty: Representations of Halal Cosmetics on YouTube in Indonesia.- Online Halal Dating: AyoPoligami and the Contestations of Polygamy as the “New Normal” in Indonesia.- Fate, Desire, and Shame: Janda in Indonesian Pop Culture.- Can Kartini Be Lesbian? Identity, Gender, and Sexual Orientation in a Post-Suharto Pop Novel.- Satukangeun Lalangsé: Sundanese Sexuality From Behind the Curtain.- Halal Lifestyle.- Shame and Self-Determination


Dr. Melani Budianta is a lecturer at the Faculty of Humanities, University of Indonesia. Her research interests tie in with gender and postcolonial studies, comparative literature, and cultural studies. She received her doctorate from Cornell University in 1992. She is an active member of the international journal Inter-Asia Cultural Studies, Routledge, the editorial board on anthology at the Project of American Literature in Asia (PALA), and she holds a position as fellow at Asian Regional Exchange for New Alternatives (ARENA). Several of her research articles have been included in international publications. Two cases in point are “Hijacking Shakespeare; The three faces of Indonesian Julius Caesars”, published in Shakespeare’s Asian Journeys - Critical Encounters, Cultural Geographies, and the Politics of Travel, edited by Bi-qi Beatrice Lei, Judy Celine Ick, amd Poonam Trivedi (2016) and The Dragon Dance: “Shifting Meaning of Chineseness in in Indonesia” in Self and Subject in Motion – Southeast Asian Pacific Cosmopolitans (2007), edited by Kathryn Robinson. Her most recently released article is “Smart Kampung: Doing Cultural Studies in the Global South” (2019), published in the journal Communication and Critical/Cultural Studies.

Dr Monika Arnez is an associate professor for Social and Cultural Anthropology and head of the research cluster Anthropology Advancements in the Department of Asian Studies at Univerzita Palackého v Olomouci, Czech Republic. She participated in the Horizon 2020 projects “Competing Regional Integrations in Southeast Asia” (CRISEA; 2017-2021) and “Integration in Southeast Asia: Trajectories of Inclusion, Dynamics of Exclusion” (SEATIDE, 2012-2016). She was an Excellent Researcher in the Sinophone Borderlands project, which was funded by EU Structural Funds. Among her publications are her co-edited books Traditions Redirecting Contemporary Indonesian Cultural Productions (Cambridge Scholars Publishing, 2017; together with Jan van der Putten, Arndt Graf and Edwin Wieringa), and The Role of Religions in the European Perception of Insular and Mainland Southeast Asia: Travel Accounts of the 16th to the 21st Century (Cambridge: Cambridge Scholars Publishing, 2016; together with Jürgen Sarnowsky). On the topic of gender and Islam she published “Dimensions of Morality: The transnational Writers’ Collective” in Bijdragen tot de Taal- Land- en Volkenkunde 172(4): 449-478, together with Eva Nisa, “A Dialogue with God? Islam and lesbian relationships in two Post-Suharto narratives,” in: Susanne Schröter (ed), Gender and Islam in Southeast Asia. Women’s Rights Movements, Religious Resurgence and Local Traditions (Leiden: Brill, 2013), p. 73-94, and “Empowering women through Islam: Fatayat NU between tradition and change” in the Journal of Islamic Studies 21 (1): 59-88, as a single author.



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