Gender, Islam and Sexuality in Contemporary Indonesia.
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Superior document: | Engaging Indonesia Series |
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Place / Publishing House: | Singapore : : Springer,, 2024. ©2024. |
Year of Publication: | 2024 |
Edition: | 1st ed. |
Language: | English |
Series: | Engaging Indonesia Series
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Physical Description: | 1 online resource (227 pages) |
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Arnez, Monika. Gender, Islam and Sexuality in Contemporary Indonesia. 1st ed. Singapore : Springer, 2024. ©2024. 1 online resource (227 pages) text txt rdacontent computer c rdamedia online resource cr rdacarrier Engaging Indonesia Series Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources. Intro -- Preface -- Acknowledgments -- Praise for Gender, Islam and Sexuality in Contemporary Indonesia -- Contents -- Editors and Contributors -- Abbreviations -- List of Figures -- 1 Gender, Islam and Sexuality in Contemporary Indonesia: An Overview -- 1.1 Regulatory Zeal -- 1.2 Where We Step In -- 1.3 Gender, Sexuality and Islam in Contemporary Indonesia: An Overview -- 1.3.1 Part I: Sexuality and Violence -- 1.4 Criminalisation and Care -- 1.4.1 Part II Halal Lifestyle -- 1.5 Modesty and Commodification -- 1.5.1 Part III Shame and Self-Determination -- 1.6 The Janda and Shame -- Notes -- References -- Part I Sexuality and Violence -- 2 Advocating for Change: Cultural and Institutional Factors of Sexual Violence in Indonesia -- 2.1 Introduction -- 2.2 Sexual Violence and Rape -- 2.3 Cultural Factors of Sexual Violence in Indonesia -- 2.4 Institutional Factors of Sexual Violence: Opacity of Secluded Spaces -- 2.5 Sexual Violence in Indonesian Institutions -- 2.6 The Long Road to the Sexual Violence Bill -- 2.7 The Expected Impact of the Sexual Violence Bill -- 2.8 Voices of Muslims on RUU TPKS -- 2.8.1 KUPI and Its Networks Struggling for RUU TPKS -- 2.8.2 KUPI: Women as Victims? -- 2.8.3 KUPI and Marital Violence -- 2.9 Conclusion -- Notes -- References -- 3 Criminalisation and Care: Indonesian Muslim Mass Organisations' Perspectives on LGBT People -- 3.1 Introduction -- 3.2 Making Sense of LGBT in the Indonesian Context -- 3.3 Criminalisation and Care -- 3.4 Muhammadiyah and Nahdlatul Ulama (NU) -- 3.5 Muhammadiyah's Non-Confrontational Approach Toward LGBT -- 3.6 Aisyiyah's Press Release: LGBT Disapproval -- 3.7 NU's Religious Edict: Condemning LGBT -- 3.8 Aisyiyah Yogyakarta: Mutual Respect Through a Healthcare Programme -- 3.9 NU Yogyakarta: Religious Advocacy for Pesantren Waria Al-Fatah -- 3.10 Conclusion -- Notes -- References. Part II Halal Lifestyle -- 4 Fraught Relations: Indonesian Modest Fashion, New York Catwalks, and the Spectacle of Travel -- 4.1 Introduction -- 4.2 Methods -- 4.3 Modest Fashion and the Minority Identity -- 4.4 Discourses of Travel -- 4.5 Arriving in New York City -- 4.6 The Political Stance of Modest Fashion -- 4.7 Traveling: The False Promise -- 4.8 Conclusion -- Notes -- References -- 5 On Certification and Beauty: Representations of Halal Cosmetics on YouTube in Indonesia -- 5.1 On the Way to Leading the Global Islamic Economy -- 5.2 The Halal Cosmetics Market in Indonesia -- 5.3 The New Hijaber Identity -- 5.4 Methods -- 5.5 The Representation of the Muslim Woman in Cosmetics Commercials -- 5.6 Halal, Hijab, and Happiness -- 5.7 Make-Up and Cosmetics from Islamic Male Preachers' Point of View -- 5.8 Conclusion -- Notes -- References -- 6 Online Halal Dating: AyoPoligami and the Contestations of Polygamy as the "New Normal" in Indonesia -- 6.1 Polygamy Twists -- 6.2 Muslim Matchmaking in the Digital Era -- 6.3 AyoPoligami -- 6.4 An AyoPoligami Experiment -- 6.5 AyoPoligami Revisited -- 6.6 Registration and Functions -- 6.7 Users and Their Motivation to Use the App -- 6.8 Online-Dating Commodified -- 6.9 Conclusion -- Notes -- References -- Part III Shame and Self-Determination -- 7 Fate, Desire, and Shame: Janda in Indonesian Pop Culture -- 7.1 Introduction: Images of Women -- 7.2 Janda in Film, Literature, and Music -- 7.2.1 Films -- 7.2.2 MetroPop Novels -- 7.2.3 Dangdut Music -- 7.3 The Janda Symbol in Popular Culture -- 7.3.1 Desire (Nafsu) -- 7.3.2 Fate (Nasib) -- 7.3.3 The Janda as a Threat -- 7.3.4 Shame -- 7.3.5 Redeemed by Men -- 7.3.6 Pretext -- 7.3.7 The Janda of the Cosmopolitan World -- 7.4 Conclusion -- Note -- References -- 8 Sexuality, Shame and Subversions in Indonesian Migrant Women's Fiction. 8.1 Sastra Buruh Migran Indonesia -- 8.2 Malu, Morality and Mobility -- 8.3 Shame, Submission and Subversion -- 8.4 Desire, Deference and Defiance -- 8.5 Conclusion -- References -- 9 Can Kartini Be Lesbian? Identity, Gender, and Sexual Orientation in a Post-Suharto Pop Novel -- 9.1 What's in a Name? -- 9.2 Judging by the Cover -- 9.3 Love and Marriage -- 9.4 Conversion to Heterosexuality? -- 9.5 The Socially Dead Lesbian -- 9.6 Readers' Responses -- 9.7 No Country for Lesbians -- Notes -- References -- 10 Satukangeun Lalangsé: Sundanese Sexuality From Behind the Curtain -- 10.1 The Satukangeun Lalangsé Rubric and the Role of Aam Amilia -- 10.2 The Structure and Plots of the Stories -- 10.3 Fiction and Reality -- 10.4 The Role of a Wife and the Institution of Polygamy -- 10.5 Conclusion -- Notes -- References -- 11 Afterthought: Vulnerability and Tenacity -- 11.1 Artists's Engagements with Islamic Dress -- 11.2 Exploring the Interface Between Gender, Islam, and Sexuality -- 11.3 The Conservative Wave -- Notes -- References -- Index. Budianta, Melani. 981-9956-58-7 |
language |
English |
format |
eBook |
author |
Arnez, Monika. |
spellingShingle |
Arnez, Monika. Gender, Islam and Sexuality in Contemporary Indonesia. Engaging Indonesia Series Intro -- Preface -- Acknowledgments -- Praise for Gender, Islam and Sexuality in Contemporary Indonesia -- Contents -- Editors and Contributors -- Abbreviations -- List of Figures -- 1 Gender, Islam and Sexuality in Contemporary Indonesia: An Overview -- 1.1 Regulatory Zeal -- 1.2 Where We Step In -- 1.3 Gender, Sexuality and Islam in Contemporary Indonesia: An Overview -- 1.3.1 Part I: Sexuality and Violence -- 1.4 Criminalisation and Care -- 1.4.1 Part II Halal Lifestyle -- 1.5 Modesty and Commodification -- 1.5.1 Part III Shame and Self-Determination -- 1.6 The Janda and Shame -- Notes -- References -- Part I Sexuality and Violence -- 2 Advocating for Change: Cultural and Institutional Factors of Sexual Violence in Indonesia -- 2.1 Introduction -- 2.2 Sexual Violence and Rape -- 2.3 Cultural Factors of Sexual Violence in Indonesia -- 2.4 Institutional Factors of Sexual Violence: Opacity of Secluded Spaces -- 2.5 Sexual Violence in Indonesian Institutions -- 2.6 The Long Road to the Sexual Violence Bill -- 2.7 The Expected Impact of the Sexual Violence Bill -- 2.8 Voices of Muslims on RUU TPKS -- 2.8.1 KUPI and Its Networks Struggling for RUU TPKS -- 2.8.2 KUPI: Women as Victims? -- 2.8.3 KUPI and Marital Violence -- 2.9 Conclusion -- Notes -- References -- 3 Criminalisation and Care: Indonesian Muslim Mass Organisations' Perspectives on LGBT People -- 3.1 Introduction -- 3.2 Making Sense of LGBT in the Indonesian Context -- 3.3 Criminalisation and Care -- 3.4 Muhammadiyah and Nahdlatul Ulama (NU) -- 3.5 Muhammadiyah's Non-Confrontational Approach Toward LGBT -- 3.6 Aisyiyah's Press Release: LGBT Disapproval -- 3.7 NU's Religious Edict: Condemning LGBT -- 3.8 Aisyiyah Yogyakarta: Mutual Respect Through a Healthcare Programme -- 3.9 NU Yogyakarta: Religious Advocacy for Pesantren Waria Al-Fatah -- 3.10 Conclusion -- Notes -- References. Part II Halal Lifestyle -- 4 Fraught Relations: Indonesian Modest Fashion, New York Catwalks, and the Spectacle of Travel -- 4.1 Introduction -- 4.2 Methods -- 4.3 Modest Fashion and the Minority Identity -- 4.4 Discourses of Travel -- 4.5 Arriving in New York City -- 4.6 The Political Stance of Modest Fashion -- 4.7 Traveling: The False Promise -- 4.8 Conclusion -- Notes -- References -- 5 On Certification and Beauty: Representations of Halal Cosmetics on YouTube in Indonesia -- 5.1 On the Way to Leading the Global Islamic Economy -- 5.2 The Halal Cosmetics Market in Indonesia -- 5.3 The New Hijaber Identity -- 5.4 Methods -- 5.5 The Representation of the Muslim Woman in Cosmetics Commercials -- 5.6 Halal, Hijab, and Happiness -- 5.7 Make-Up and Cosmetics from Islamic Male Preachers' Point of View -- 5.8 Conclusion -- Notes -- References -- 6 Online Halal Dating: AyoPoligami and the Contestations of Polygamy as the "New Normal" in Indonesia -- 6.1 Polygamy Twists -- 6.2 Muslim Matchmaking in the Digital Era -- 6.3 AyoPoligami -- 6.4 An AyoPoligami Experiment -- 6.5 AyoPoligami Revisited -- 6.6 Registration and Functions -- 6.7 Users and Their Motivation to Use the App -- 6.8 Online-Dating Commodified -- 6.9 Conclusion -- Notes -- References -- Part III Shame and Self-Determination -- 7 Fate, Desire, and Shame: Janda in Indonesian Pop Culture -- 7.1 Introduction: Images of Women -- 7.2 Janda in Film, Literature, and Music -- 7.2.1 Films -- 7.2.2 MetroPop Novels -- 7.2.3 Dangdut Music -- 7.3 The Janda Symbol in Popular Culture -- 7.3.1 Desire (Nafsu) -- 7.3.2 Fate (Nasib) -- 7.3.3 The Janda as a Threat -- 7.3.4 Shame -- 7.3.5 Redeemed by Men -- 7.3.6 Pretext -- 7.3.7 The Janda of the Cosmopolitan World -- 7.4 Conclusion -- Note -- References -- 8 Sexuality, Shame and Subversions in Indonesian Migrant Women's Fiction. 8.1 Sastra Buruh Migran Indonesia -- 8.2 Malu, Morality and Mobility -- 8.3 Shame, Submission and Subversion -- 8.4 Desire, Deference and Defiance -- 8.5 Conclusion -- References -- 9 Can Kartini Be Lesbian? Identity, Gender, and Sexual Orientation in a Post-Suharto Pop Novel -- 9.1 What's in a Name? -- 9.2 Judging by the Cover -- 9.3 Love and Marriage -- 9.4 Conversion to Heterosexuality? -- 9.5 The Socially Dead Lesbian -- 9.6 Readers' Responses -- 9.7 No Country for Lesbians -- Notes -- References -- 10 Satukangeun Lalangsé: Sundanese Sexuality From Behind the Curtain -- 10.1 The Satukangeun Lalangsé Rubric and the Role of Aam Amilia -- 10.2 The Structure and Plots of the Stories -- 10.3 Fiction and Reality -- 10.4 The Role of a Wife and the Institution of Polygamy -- 10.5 Conclusion -- Notes -- References -- 11 Afterthought: Vulnerability and Tenacity -- 11.1 Artists's Engagements with Islamic Dress -- 11.2 Exploring the Interface Between Gender, Islam, and Sexuality -- 11.3 The Conservative Wave -- Notes -- References -- Index. |
author_facet |
Arnez, Monika. Budianta, Melani. |
author_variant |
m a ma |
author2 |
Budianta, Melani. |
author2_variant |
m b mb |
author2_role |
TeilnehmendeR |
author_sort |
Arnez, Monika. |
title |
Gender, Islam and Sexuality in Contemporary Indonesia. |
title_full |
Gender, Islam and Sexuality in Contemporary Indonesia. |
title_fullStr |
Gender, Islam and Sexuality in Contemporary Indonesia. |
title_full_unstemmed |
Gender, Islam and Sexuality in Contemporary Indonesia. |
title_auth |
Gender, Islam and Sexuality in Contemporary Indonesia. |
title_new |
Gender, Islam and Sexuality in Contemporary Indonesia. |
title_sort |
gender, islam and sexuality in contemporary indonesia. |
series |
Engaging Indonesia Series |
series2 |
Engaging Indonesia Series |
publisher |
Springer, |
publishDate |
2024 |
physical |
1 online resource (227 pages) |
edition |
1st ed. |
contents |
Intro -- Preface -- Acknowledgments -- Praise for Gender, Islam and Sexuality in Contemporary Indonesia -- Contents -- Editors and Contributors -- Abbreviations -- List of Figures -- 1 Gender, Islam and Sexuality in Contemporary Indonesia: An Overview -- 1.1 Regulatory Zeal -- 1.2 Where We Step In -- 1.3 Gender, Sexuality and Islam in Contemporary Indonesia: An Overview -- 1.3.1 Part I: Sexuality and Violence -- 1.4 Criminalisation and Care -- 1.4.1 Part II Halal Lifestyle -- 1.5 Modesty and Commodification -- 1.5.1 Part III Shame and Self-Determination -- 1.6 The Janda and Shame -- Notes -- References -- Part I Sexuality and Violence -- 2 Advocating for Change: Cultural and Institutional Factors of Sexual Violence in Indonesia -- 2.1 Introduction -- 2.2 Sexual Violence and Rape -- 2.3 Cultural Factors of Sexual Violence in Indonesia -- 2.4 Institutional Factors of Sexual Violence: Opacity of Secluded Spaces -- 2.5 Sexual Violence in Indonesian Institutions -- 2.6 The Long Road to the Sexual Violence Bill -- 2.7 The Expected Impact of the Sexual Violence Bill -- 2.8 Voices of Muslims on RUU TPKS -- 2.8.1 KUPI and Its Networks Struggling for RUU TPKS -- 2.8.2 KUPI: Women as Victims? -- 2.8.3 KUPI and Marital Violence -- 2.9 Conclusion -- Notes -- References -- 3 Criminalisation and Care: Indonesian Muslim Mass Organisations' Perspectives on LGBT People -- 3.1 Introduction -- 3.2 Making Sense of LGBT in the Indonesian Context -- 3.3 Criminalisation and Care -- 3.4 Muhammadiyah and Nahdlatul Ulama (NU) -- 3.5 Muhammadiyah's Non-Confrontational Approach Toward LGBT -- 3.6 Aisyiyah's Press Release: LGBT Disapproval -- 3.7 NU's Religious Edict: Condemning LGBT -- 3.8 Aisyiyah Yogyakarta: Mutual Respect Through a Healthcare Programme -- 3.9 NU Yogyakarta: Religious Advocacy for Pesantren Waria Al-Fatah -- 3.10 Conclusion -- Notes -- References. Part II Halal Lifestyle -- 4 Fraught Relations: Indonesian Modest Fashion, New York Catwalks, and the Spectacle of Travel -- 4.1 Introduction -- 4.2 Methods -- 4.3 Modest Fashion and the Minority Identity -- 4.4 Discourses of Travel -- 4.5 Arriving in New York City -- 4.6 The Political Stance of Modest Fashion -- 4.7 Traveling: The False Promise -- 4.8 Conclusion -- Notes -- References -- 5 On Certification and Beauty: Representations of Halal Cosmetics on YouTube in Indonesia -- 5.1 On the Way to Leading the Global Islamic Economy -- 5.2 The Halal Cosmetics Market in Indonesia -- 5.3 The New Hijaber Identity -- 5.4 Methods -- 5.5 The Representation of the Muslim Woman in Cosmetics Commercials -- 5.6 Halal, Hijab, and Happiness -- 5.7 Make-Up and Cosmetics from Islamic Male Preachers' Point of View -- 5.8 Conclusion -- Notes -- References -- 6 Online Halal Dating: AyoPoligami and the Contestations of Polygamy as the "New Normal" in Indonesia -- 6.1 Polygamy Twists -- 6.2 Muslim Matchmaking in the Digital Era -- 6.3 AyoPoligami -- 6.4 An AyoPoligami Experiment -- 6.5 AyoPoligami Revisited -- 6.6 Registration and Functions -- 6.7 Users and Their Motivation to Use the App -- 6.8 Online-Dating Commodified -- 6.9 Conclusion -- Notes -- References -- Part III Shame and Self-Determination -- 7 Fate, Desire, and Shame: Janda in Indonesian Pop Culture -- 7.1 Introduction: Images of Women -- 7.2 Janda in Film, Literature, and Music -- 7.2.1 Films -- 7.2.2 MetroPop Novels -- 7.2.3 Dangdut Music -- 7.3 The Janda Symbol in Popular Culture -- 7.3.1 Desire (Nafsu) -- 7.3.2 Fate (Nasib) -- 7.3.3 The Janda as a Threat -- 7.3.4 Shame -- 7.3.5 Redeemed by Men -- 7.3.6 Pretext -- 7.3.7 The Janda of the Cosmopolitan World -- 7.4 Conclusion -- Note -- References -- 8 Sexuality, Shame and Subversions in Indonesian Migrant Women's Fiction. 8.1 Sastra Buruh Migran Indonesia -- 8.2 Malu, Morality and Mobility -- 8.3 Shame, Submission and Subversion -- 8.4 Desire, Deference and Defiance -- 8.5 Conclusion -- References -- 9 Can Kartini Be Lesbian? Identity, Gender, and Sexual Orientation in a Post-Suharto Pop Novel -- 9.1 What's in a Name? -- 9.2 Judging by the Cover -- 9.3 Love and Marriage -- 9.4 Conversion to Heterosexuality? -- 9.5 The Socially Dead Lesbian -- 9.6 Readers' Responses -- 9.7 No Country for Lesbians -- Notes -- References -- 10 Satukangeun Lalangsé: Sundanese Sexuality From Behind the Curtain -- 10.1 The Satukangeun Lalangsé Rubric and the Role of Aam Amilia -- 10.2 The Structure and Plots of the Stories -- 10.3 Fiction and Reality -- 10.4 The Role of a Wife and the Institution of Polygamy -- 10.5 Conclusion -- Notes -- References -- 11 Afterthought: Vulnerability and Tenacity -- 11.1 Artists's Engagements with Islamic Dress -- 11.2 Exploring the Interface Between Gender, Islam, and Sexuality -- 11.3 The Conservative Wave -- Notes -- References -- Index. |
isbn |
981-9956-59-5 981-9956-58-7 |
callnumber-first |
H - Social Science |
callnumber-subject |
HQ - Family, Marriage, Women |
callnumber-label |
HQ12-449 |
callnumber-sort |
HQ 212 3449 |
illustrated |
Not Illustrated |
oclc_num |
1424866597 |
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