Indonesian youth culture is sometimes depicted through a moral panic discourse about mixed sex socializing. In this article, the authors challenge that view by presenting some ethnographic material on young Muslim Indonesians of both sexes socialising in an internet café and gathering during Ramadhan in a mall in Solo, Central Java. Young Indonesians enact everyday youth culture through the negotiation of space, time, and technology within the strong discourse of moral propriety and gender separation advised by contemporary Islam. The intense social bonding between same sex age peers provides security and reassurance for young men and women in the transition to adulthood. Technology is now integral to this bonding
This article describes one of the effects of globalization on young Muslims in Indonesia. This artic...
Contemporary Indonesia has seen the simultaneous growth of social media technology and an increase i...
In contemporary Indonesia, Muslims increasingly define themselves by othering fellow Muslims, includ...
Indonesian youth culture is sometimes depicted through a moral panic discourse about mixed sex socia...
This article suggests that social media and public spaces in contemporary Indonesia play an essent...
This chapter reports on teenage girls socializing in Solo, Central Java in 2007. The locations are a...
Elsewhere argued that the line divides the “real,” offline realm, and the cybersphere is blurred. Bo...
One of the great transformations presently sweeping the Muslim world involves not just political and...
This article investigates the hybrid portraits of identity among young Muslims who are members of th...
This article explores the rise of contemporary Islamic movement that emerged as a result of a counte...
AbstractSince its emergence, the discourse of Liberal Islam has invited much controversy. Several Mu...
This thesis examines the dissemination of ta‟aruf discourse among Muslim youth, at Rumah Taaruf-Qu Y...
Perhaps one of the most important findings from this study concerns the way many Indonesian youths...
What does it mean to be a modern Muslim today? In contemporary discourse Islam and modernity are oft...
Gender, Sexuality and Islam in Contemporary Indonesia explores gender, sexuality and religion in con...
This article describes one of the effects of globalization on young Muslims in Indonesia. This artic...
Contemporary Indonesia has seen the simultaneous growth of social media technology and an increase i...
In contemporary Indonesia, Muslims increasingly define themselves by othering fellow Muslims, includ...
Indonesian youth culture is sometimes depicted through a moral panic discourse about mixed sex socia...
This article suggests that social media and public spaces in contemporary Indonesia play an essent...
This chapter reports on teenage girls socializing in Solo, Central Java in 2007. The locations are a...
Elsewhere argued that the line divides the “real,” offline realm, and the cybersphere is blurred. Bo...
One of the great transformations presently sweeping the Muslim world involves not just political and...
This article investigates the hybrid portraits of identity among young Muslims who are members of th...
This article explores the rise of contemporary Islamic movement that emerged as a result of a counte...
AbstractSince its emergence, the discourse of Liberal Islam has invited much controversy. Several Mu...
This thesis examines the dissemination of ta‟aruf discourse among Muslim youth, at Rumah Taaruf-Qu Y...
Perhaps one of the most important findings from this study concerns the way many Indonesian youths...
What does it mean to be a modern Muslim today? In contemporary discourse Islam and modernity are oft...
Gender, Sexuality and Islam in Contemporary Indonesia explores gender, sexuality and religion in con...
This article describes one of the effects of globalization on young Muslims in Indonesia. This artic...
Contemporary Indonesia has seen the simultaneous growth of social media technology and an increase i...
In contemporary Indonesia, Muslims increasingly define themselves by othering fellow Muslims, includ...