Listing 1 - 2 of 2 |
Sort by
|
Choose an application
The Javanese - one of the largest ethnic groups in the Islamic world - were once mostly 'nominal Muslims' with pious believers a minority and the majority seemingly resistant to Islam's call for greater piety. Over the tumultuous period analyzed here - from the 1930s to the 2000s - that society has changed profoundly to become an extraordinary example of the rising religiosity that marks the modern age. Islamisation and Its Opponents in Java draws on a formidable body of sources, including interviews, archival documents and a vast range of published material, to situate the Javanese religious experience. Winner of the Kahin Prize from the Association of Asia Studies, the study has considerable relevance for much wider contexts. The final section of the book, which considers the significance of Java's religious history in global contexts, shows how it exemplifies a profound contest of values in the universal human search for a better life.
Islam --- Java (Indonesia) --- History. --- Religion. --- Mohammedanism --- Muhammadanism --- Muslimism --- Mussulmanism --- Religions --- Muslims --- Djawa (Indonesia) --- Jawa (Indonesia) --- Pulau Jawa (Indonesia) --- Greater Sunda Islands --- Javanese (Indonesian people) --- Islam and politics --- Politics and Islam --- Political science --- Javanese --- Ethnology --- Political aspects --- History --- Islamisation --- Javanism --- fundamentalism --- religiousity
Choose an application
Emigration and immigration --- Emigration et immigration --- Religious aspects. --- Aspect religieux --- Europe --- Religion --- Religious aspects --- Religious life and customs --- 316:2 <4> --- Godsdienstsociologie--Europa --- Council of Europe countries --- Eastern Hemisphere --- Eurasia --- 316:2 <4> Godsdienstsociologie--Europa --- Emigration and immigration - Religious aspects --- Europe - Religion - 21st century --- Europe - Religious life and customs --- religion --- migration, religion and social theory --- economy, migration and social change --- immigrant religions and the context of reception in advanced industrial societies --- religion and migration in Europe --- migration and ethno-religious identity --- Greece --- the Orthodox Church --- the Portuguese Catholic Church --- Eastern European immigrants --- Catholic-Christian second generations --- ethnic and religious diversities in Portugal --- Brazilian Evangelical immigrants --- African Christian communities --- Sweden --- young Muslim women's public self-representations --- Italy --- values and religion in transition --- Swedish multicultural public school --- Hijab --- Oslo --- religiousity and ethnicity --- Vietnamese immigrant religion in Denmark
Listing 1 - 2 of 2 |
Sort by
|