{"title":"Miracles and material life: rice, ore, traps and guns in Islamic Malaya","authors":"Farouk Yahya","doi":"10.1080/0967828X.2022.2083824","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Miracles and Material Life by Terenjit Sevea feels like the grand open ing of an independent bookstore you just happened to pass by. The vaults of an enthusiastic collector are finally opened, and every nook and cranny you investigate promises an exhilarating, unexpected spark. The central focus of Sevea’s microhistory is the Islamic miracle worker (“pawang” or “bomoh”) in late-nineteenth and early-twentieth century Malaya. Building on his creative engagement with Jawi manuscripts, and wide-ranging scholarship on Sufism, Islamic material culture, and Islam in South and Southeast Asia, Sevea demonstrates how these extraor-dinary figures manifested Islamic tradition and shaped colonial labor practices, and show how the Sufi networks, local forms of life, and labor contingencies in which these Islamic miracle workers were enmeshed animated their Islamic practice and impacted modern Malaya. This monograph will be especially valuable to scholars working on Islam and modernity, Sufism, and Islam in Southeast Asia. For those fields, Sevea fleshes out critically overlooked facets of Islamic tradition. But Sevea’s analysis will also add to fields as wide-ranging as history of science, material religion studies, gender studies, ethnic studies, ecocriticism,","PeriodicalId":45498,"journal":{"name":"South East Asia Research","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":0.7000,"publicationDate":"2022-04-03","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"5","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"South East Asia Research","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1080/0967828X.2022.2083824","RegionNum":3,"RegionCategory":"社会学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"0","JCRName":"ASIAN STUDIES","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 5
Abstract
Miracles and Material Life by Terenjit Sevea feels like the grand open ing of an independent bookstore you just happened to pass by. The vaults of an enthusiastic collector are finally opened, and every nook and cranny you investigate promises an exhilarating, unexpected spark. The central focus of Sevea’s microhistory is the Islamic miracle worker (“pawang” or “bomoh”) in late-nineteenth and early-twentieth century Malaya. Building on his creative engagement with Jawi manuscripts, and wide-ranging scholarship on Sufism, Islamic material culture, and Islam in South and Southeast Asia, Sevea demonstrates how these extraor-dinary figures manifested Islamic tradition and shaped colonial labor practices, and show how the Sufi networks, local forms of life, and labor contingencies in which these Islamic miracle workers were enmeshed animated their Islamic practice and impacted modern Malaya. This monograph will be especially valuable to scholars working on Islam and modernity, Sufism, and Islam in Southeast Asia. For those fields, Sevea fleshes out critically overlooked facets of Islamic tradition. But Sevea’s analysis will also add to fields as wide-ranging as history of science, material religion studies, gender studies, ethnic studies, ecocriticism,
Terenjit Sevea的《奇迹与物质生活》(Miracles and Material Life)感觉就像是你刚刚路过的一家独立书店的盛大开业。一位热情的收藏家的金库终于打开了,你调查的每一个角落都会产生令人振奋、意想不到的火花。塞维亚微观史的中心焦点是十九世纪末和二十世纪初马来亚的伊斯兰奇迹工作者(“pawang”或“bomoh”)。在他对贾维手稿的创造性参与,以及对南亚和东南亚的苏菲主义、伊斯兰物质文化和伊斯兰教的广泛研究的基础上,塞维亚展示了这些杰出人物是如何表现伊斯兰传统和塑造殖民劳工实践的,并展示了苏菲网络、当地生活形式,这些伊斯兰奇迹工作者所陷入的劳工意外事件激发了他们的伊斯兰实践,并影响了现代马来亚。这本专著对研究伊斯兰教与现代性、苏菲主义和东南亚伊斯兰教的学者尤其有价值。对于这些领域,Sevea充实了伊斯兰传统中被严重忽视的方面。但Sevea的分析也将增加科学史、物质宗教研究、性别研究、种族研究、生态批评等领域,
期刊介绍:
Published three times per year by IP Publishing on behalf of SOAS (increasing to quarterly in 2010), South East Asia Research includes papers on all aspects of South East Asia within the disciplines of archaeology, art history, economics, geography, history, language and literature, law, music, political science, social anthropology and religious studies. Papers are based on original research or field work.