Hearing Allah's Call: Preaching and Performance in Indonesian Islam

Hearing Allah's Call changes the way we think about Islamic communication. In the city of Bandung in Indonesia, sermons are not reserved for mosques and sites for Friday prayers. Muslim speakers are in demand for all kinds of events, from rites of passage to motivational speeches for companies and other organizations. Julian Millie spent fourteen months sitting among listeners at such events, and he provides detailed contextual description of the everyday realities of Muslim listening as well as preaching. In describing the venues, the audience, and preachers—many of whom are women—he reveals tensions between entertainment and traditional expressions of faith and moral rectitude.

The sermonizers use in-jokes, double entendres, and mimicry in their expositions, playing on their audiences' emotions, triggering reactions from critics who accuse them of neglecting listeners' intellects. Millie focused specifically on the listening routines that enliven everyday life for Muslims in all social spaces—imagine the hardworking preachers who make Sunday worship enjoyable for rural as well as urban Americans—and who captivate audiences with skills that attract criticism from more formal interpreters of Islam. The ethnography is rich and full of insightful observations and details. Hearing Allah's Call will appeal to students of the practice of anthropology as well as all those intrigued by contemporary Islam.

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Hearing Allah's Call: Preaching and Performance in Indonesian Islam

Hearing Allah's Call changes the way we think about Islamic communication. In the city of Bandung in Indonesia, sermons are not reserved for mosques and sites for Friday prayers. Muslim speakers are in demand for all kinds of events, from rites of passage to motivational speeches for companies and other organizations. Julian Millie spent fourteen months sitting among listeners at such events, and he provides detailed contextual description of the everyday realities of Muslim listening as well as preaching. In describing the venues, the audience, and preachers—many of whom are women—he reveals tensions between entertainment and traditional expressions of faith and moral rectitude.

The sermonizers use in-jokes, double entendres, and mimicry in their expositions, playing on their audiences' emotions, triggering reactions from critics who accuse them of neglecting listeners' intellects. Millie focused specifically on the listening routines that enliven everyday life for Muslims in all social spaces—imagine the hardworking preachers who make Sunday worship enjoyable for rural as well as urban Americans—and who captivate audiences with skills that attract criticism from more formal interpreters of Islam. The ethnography is rich and full of insightful observations and details. Hearing Allah's Call will appeal to students of the practice of anthropology as well as all those intrigued by contemporary Islam.

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Hearing Allah's Call: Preaching and Performance in Indonesian Islam

Hearing Allah's Call: Preaching and Performance in Indonesian Islam

by Julian Millie
Hearing Allah's Call: Preaching and Performance in Indonesian Islam

Hearing Allah's Call: Preaching and Performance in Indonesian Islam

by Julian Millie

eBook

$22.99 

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Overview

Hearing Allah's Call changes the way we think about Islamic communication. In the city of Bandung in Indonesia, sermons are not reserved for mosques and sites for Friday prayers. Muslim speakers are in demand for all kinds of events, from rites of passage to motivational speeches for companies and other organizations. Julian Millie spent fourteen months sitting among listeners at such events, and he provides detailed contextual description of the everyday realities of Muslim listening as well as preaching. In describing the venues, the audience, and preachers—many of whom are women—he reveals tensions between entertainment and traditional expressions of faith and moral rectitude.

The sermonizers use in-jokes, double entendres, and mimicry in their expositions, playing on their audiences' emotions, triggering reactions from critics who accuse them of neglecting listeners' intellects. Millie focused specifically on the listening routines that enliven everyday life for Muslims in all social spaces—imagine the hardworking preachers who make Sunday worship enjoyable for rural as well as urban Americans—and who captivate audiences with skills that attract criticism from more formal interpreters of Islam. The ethnography is rich and full of insightful observations and details. Hearing Allah's Call will appeal to students of the practice of anthropology as well as all those intrigued by contemporary Islam.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781501712241
Publisher: Cornell University Press
Publication date: 09/15/2017
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 276
File size: 2 MB
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

Julian Millie is Associate Professor of Anthropology at Monash University. He is the author of Bidasari and Splashed by the Saint.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments
Note on Transcription
Introduction
1. Preaching Diversity in Bandung
2. The Unique Voice... and Its Travails
3. Preaching "without Performing"
4. The Languages of Preaching in the Islamic Public Sphere
5. The Listening Audience Laughs and Cries, the Writing Public Thinks
6. A Feminized Domain
7. Public Contest and the Pragmatics of Performance
8. Standing Up for Listening
Conclusion
Appendixes
A. Wedding Sermon by Al-Jauhari
B. Sunday Study Sermon by Shiddiq Amien
C. Translation of Excerpt of Sermon by A. F. Ghazali
Notes
Works Cited
Index

What People are Saying About This

Bill Watson

"Innovative and illuminating, Hearing Allah’s Call is an excellent account of Muslim oratorical practice in West Java. It should find a readership among those who wish to know about the way Islam is understood and practiced in everday life in Indonesia."

Ward Keeler

"One of the most important features of recent Indonesian history has been the astonishing growth of interest in and activity revolving around Islam. Analysis by a well-informed and sympathetic observer, as Julian Millie clearly is, of any aspect of this phenomenon is very valuable. Religious oratory is also a topic of great significance, not only with respect to Islam but also in contemporary Buddhism, certainly, and in some strands of Christianity, as well."

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