Religious and Pro-Violence Populism in Indonesia: The Rise and Fall of a Far-Right Islamist Civilisationist Movement

被引:11
|
作者
Barton, Greg [1 ]
Yilmaz, Ihsan [1 ]
Morieson, Nicholas [2 ]
机构
[1] Deakin Univ, Fac Arts & Educ, Alfred Deakin Inst Citizenship & Globalisat, Melbourne Burwood Campus, Melbourne, Vic 3125, Australia
[2] Australian Catholic Univ, Inst Relig Polit & Soc, Melbourne, Vic 3065, Australia
关键词
populism; religious populism; civilizationism; Islamist populism; violence; far-right; Islamic Defenders Front (FPI); Indonesia; Islam; CIVILIZATIONISM; NATIONALISM; OLIGARCHY; POLITICS; STATE;
D O I
10.3390/rel12060397
中图分类号
B9 [宗教];
学科分类号
010107 ;
摘要
The first quarter of the twenty-first century has witnessed the rise of populism around the world. While it is widespread it manifests in its own unique ways in each society, nation, and region. Religious populism, once rarely discussed, has come to take a more prominent role in the politics of a diverse range of societies and countries, as religious discourse is increasingly used by mainstream and peripheral populist actors alike. This paper examines the rise of religious populism in Indonesia through a study of the widely talked about, but little understood, Islamic Defenders Front (FPI-Front Pembela Islam). The case study method used to examine the FPI provides a unique insight into a liminal organization which, through populist and pro-violence Islamist discourse and political lobbying, has had an outsized impact on Indonesian politics. In this paper, we identify the FPI as an Islamist civilizationist populist group and show how the group frames Indonesian domestic political events within a larger cosmic battle between faithful and righteous Muslims and the forces that stand against Islam, whether they be "unfaithful Muslims" or non-Muslims. We also show how the case of the FPI demonstrates the manner in which smaller, liminal, political actors can instrumentalise religion and leverage religious rhetoric to reshape political discourse, and in doing so, drive demand for religious populism. The paper makes two arguments: First, the FPI is an example of a civilizationist populist movement which instrumentalises religion in order to create demand for its populist solutions. Second, that as Islamic groups and organisations in Indonesia increasingly rely on religio-civilizational concepts of national identity, they become more transnational in outlook, rhetoric, and organisation and more closely aligned with religious developments in the Middle East.
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页数:22
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