The politics of becoming fundamentalist in the age of consumer culture
Abstract
The focus of this thesis is the rise of Islamic fundamentalism in Indonesia since the
late 1990s. The arguments outlined in the existing works about the recent Islamic
fundamentalism can be categorised into four topics: Islamic politics, interpretation of
religious teachings, global Islamic radicalism and endogenous militant Muslims in
the past. This thesis suggests an alternative approach. Based on theories developed
within the studies of social movements, identity politics and consumer culture, it is
argued that Indonesian Islamic fundamentalism is a form of resistance to problems of
oppression and domination and, essentially, reflects social antagonism. The
resistance takes the path of the struggle for identity because oppression and
domination work at the level of self and everyday life. This kind of oppression and
domination takes away one's critical abilities to take independent action and to
produce one's own meanings of life in order to create a sense of certainty.
The source of oppression is the rapid flow of images and signs that
increasingly colonise the fabric of everyday life in modern society. The flowing
images reflect the consumer culture, which constitutes the increasingly dominant
social and cultural order. Capitalist development contributes significantly to its
emergence. The rise of Islamic fundamentalism can be seen as a negation of
consumer culture. The resistance, moreover, is an attempt to reject the occupation of
self and everyday life by the saturating images and is a challenge to the consumer
culture's dominating power. The way the fundamentalists resist, however, is
influenced by their location within the class divisions created by the same capitalist
development that produces the consumer culture. Throughout this thesis the intention is not to treat knowledge as a neutral and
objective instrument for passively disclosing reality. Instead, knowledge is used not
only to describe a given phenomenon, but also, more importantly, to shape and
produce it. Specifically, the knowledge produced here attempts to expose
contradictions and conflicts within the existing socio-cultural order in which Islamic
fundamentalism emerges. My aim is to produce a different reality of the phenomenon
in order to promote a more critical understanding of the current structural conditions.
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