Bruinessen, Martin Van. 2011. What happened to the smiling face of
Indonesian Islam?: Muslim intellectualism and the conservative turn in
post-Suharto Indonesia. Singapore: S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies, Nanyang Technological University.
The transition from authoritarian to democratic rule in Indonesia has been accompanied by the apparent decline of the liberal Muslim discourse that was dominant during the 1970s and 1980s and the increasing prominence of Islamist and fundamentalist interpretations of Islam. This paper attempts to go beyond a superficial reading of these developments and explores the conditions that favored the flourishing of liberal Muslim thought during the New Order as well as the various factors that from the 1980s onwards supported the rise of transnational Islamist movements, at the expense of the established mainstream organizations, Muhammadiyah and NU.
Available online at: http://www.rsis.edu.sg/publications/WorkingPapers/WP222.pdf
The transition from authoritarian to democratic rule in Indonesia has been accompanied by the apparent decline of the liberal Muslim discourse that was dominant during the 1970s and 1980s and the increasing prominence of Islamist and fundamentalist interpretations of Islam. This paper attempts to go beyond a superficial reading of these developments and explores the conditions that favored the flourishing of liberal Muslim thought during the New Order as well as the various factors that from the 1980s onwards supported the rise of transnational Islamist movements, at the expense of the established mainstream organizations, Muhammadiyah and NU.
Available online at: http://www.rsis.edu.sg/publications/WorkingPapers/WP222.pdf