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   系統號碼935555
   書刊名Islamism and the quest for hegemony in Indonesia [electronic resource] /
   主要著者Hakim, Luqman Nul.
   其他著者SpringerLink (Online service);臺灣學術電子書聯盟 (TAEBC)
   出版項Singapore : Imprint: Palgrave Macmillan, 2023.
   索書號BP63.I5
   ISBN9789811996610
   標題Islam and politics-Indonesia-History.
Hegemony-Indonesia.
Islam-Indonesia.
Politics and Religion.
Asian Politics.
Indonesia-Religion.
   電子資源https://doi.org/10.1007/978-981-19-9661-0
   叢書名Contestations in contemporary Southeast Asia,2661-8362;Contestations in contemporary Southeast Asia.2661-8362
   
    
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內容簡介This book examines the failure of Islamic politics in becoming a hegemonic force in Indonesia and the far-reaching consequences for current practices of democracy and of Islam itself. In contrast to the thesis of compatibility between Islam and democracy following the dominant discourse of the Global War on Terror (GWOT) and neoliberal democracy, this study situates Islamic politics in broader social settings by examining its nature and trajectories throughout Indonesia's modern political history. The book thus investigates how the practices of Islamic politics, or Islamism, have shaped and been transformed through political contestations and the formation of coalitions of multiple forces in constructing Indonesia's socio-political landscape. Using the concept of hegemony from poststructuralist discourse theory, the analytical framework applied in this book goes beyond liberal epistemologies of Islamism that prescribe the separation of religion from politics and treat Islamism as an object of intervention. Instead, the book is premised on the contention that Indonesia is a political construction, in which Islam has become one of the major discourses that have defined and transformed Indonesia's nation-state throughout history. In this view, it is argued that the nature and dynamics of Islamism are not driven primarily by different interpretations of religious doctrines, cultural norms or by the imperative of institutions. Rather, the struggles of different Islamist projects in their quest for hegemony are contingent on the outcomes of socio-political changes and contestations that involve multiple political forces, both within and beyond the Islamists, in specific historical conjunctures. Luqman Nul Hakim is a lecturer at the Department of International Relations and a director at the Institute of International Studies (IIS), Universitas Gadjah Mada, Indonesia.

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