University Lectures Committee Lecture and CSEAS Friday Forum: Kevin Fogg

This event has passed.

206 Ingraham Hall
@ 12:00 pm - 1:30 pm

The University Lectures Committee
in partnership with The Center for Southeast Asian Studies
The Department of History &
The Southeast Asian Research Group presents…

“Mainline Islam: Islamic Associational Life in Indonesia”

Kevin W. Fogg
Associate Director, Carolina Asia Center

University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill

Indonesian Islam has a unique structure in its associational life, in the form of mass Islamic organizations. The most well-known of these, NU and Muhammadiyah, are frequently heralded by politicians and scholars as pillars of religious life and civil society in Indonesia, but there are many similar organizations that function on a provincial or regional level in a similar capacity. This project draws in a comparative study of three regional mass Islamic organizations—Jamiyatul Washliyah founded in Medan, Nahdlatul Ulama based on Lombok, and Alkhairaat headquartered in Palu—to draw broader conclusions about the nature of Islamic associational life in Indonesia, how Indonesian organizations differ from Islamic groups in other countries, and how Islamic organizations in Indonesia have changed over the last century. The project also uses a comparison with American Protestantism, the so-called “Mainline Protestant Denominations,” to articulate a category of organization that is normative in Indonesia but unknown elsewhere in the Islamic world: “mainline” Islamic organizations.

 

Dr. Kevin W. Fogg is the Associate Director of the Carolina Asia Center at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. With degrees from Duke and Yale, he previously taught at Oxford University, and he has been a visiting researcher at State Islamic Universities across Indonesia. As a historian, his work focuses on Islamic communities in Indonesia after independence.

This event is free and open to the public. A recording will be available on the CSEAS YouTube channel following the event.