Honorable Mention for the 2008 Clifford Geertz Prize in the
Anthropology of Religion!The roots of contemporary Islamic
militancy in Southeast Asia lie in the sixteenth century, when
Christian Europeans first tried to dominate Indian Ocean trade.
Through a detailed analysis of sacred scriptures, epic narratives
and oral histories from the region, this book shows how Southeast
Asian Muslims combined cosmopolitan Islamic models of knowledge and
authority with local Austronesian models of divine kingship to
first resist and then to appropriate Dutch colonial models of
rational bureaucracy. At the beginning of the twenty-first century,
these models continue to shape regional responses to contemporary
trends such as the rise of global Islamism.
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