ISlAM AND MUSLIMS IN SOUTHEAST ASIA A BIBLIOGRAPHY OF ENGLISH-LANGUAGE PUBLICATIONS 1945-1993 Compiled by Patricia Horvatich Southeast Asia Paper No. 38 Center for Southeast Asian Studies &'hool of Hawaiian, Asian and Pacific Studies University of Hawai'i at Manoa October 1993 PREFACE This bibliography on Islam and Muslims in Southeast Asia has long been in the making. I began compiling references on this subject six years ago when preparing for my comprehensive examinations as a graduate student of anthropology at Stanford University. Work on this bibliography continued as I conducted research on Islam among the Sama people of the Philippines. After completing my dissertation, I was hired by the Center for Southeast Asian Studies at the University of Hawai'i to teach courses on Islam in Southeast Asia. My research on Islam thus progressed as I prepared lectures and searched for relevant student readings. When Florence Lamoureux, the program coordinator of the Center for Southeast Asian Studies, suggested that I publish this bibliography in the Center's series, I made a final attempt to ensure that this work was as complete as possible. I began a systematic search for materials available at the Hamilton Library's Asian Collection at the University of Hawai'i. This search involved use of modern technology in the form of the UHCARL system and CD Rom and also the more familiar, if laborious, method of combing through journals, edited volumes, and bibliographies for pertinent references. As a result of these endeavors, this bibliography assumes its present and, for now, final form. In preparing this bibliography for publication, my priority has been to keep its scope as broad and interdisciplinary as possible by including topics that pertain to history, anthropology, sociology, art, music, literature; education, economics, politics, and law. Maintaining this broad range of topics has forced me to limit this work in other ways-­ namely by focusing upon material published after 1945 in the English language. Limiting this bibliography to published texts means that I have not included references to dissertations, conference papers, and works that are currently in press. I have also not included references to work published in languages other than English. I had to limit my search to English primarily because of the sheer number of texts published in Malay languages. For example, a search through the University of Hawaii CARL system on "Indonesia" and "Islam" reveals 623 entries, 530 (or 83%) of them in the Indonesian language. Including all such references would require that I narrow the scope of this bibliography, something I was not prepared to do. Those interested in pursuing studies of foreign-language texts, dissertations, and work published before 1945 will find references to useful bibliographies within these pages. I have organized this bibliography by subjects. Instead of using the standard library of congress headings, I have employed categories that I have found most useful in studying Islam in Southeast Asia. Works that address more than a single topic are listed under all relevant subject headings. An author index follows the body of this bibliography and lists all authors in alphabetical order. I have followed a general convention in alphabetizing authors' names by citing Malay and Thai scholars by their "first" names. For example, Chaiwat Satha-Anand is listed under "C" as Chaiwat Satha-Anand and not under "S" as Satha-Anand, Chaiwat. The names of Indonesian and Filipino Muslims are cited last names first. For example, Nurcholish Madjid is listed as Madjid, Nurcholish. The author index follows the example of the text, but also lists all authors by their "last" names: Chaiwat Satha-Anand is listed as Chaiwat and as Satha-Anand. Authors with last names prefaced by "van" or "von" are not listed under "V". For example, Franz Von Benda-Beckmann is cited as Benda-Beckmann, Franz Von, and Justus Maria van der Kroef is cited as Kroef, Justus Maria van der. Before concluding this preface, I must thank the Center for Southeast Asian Studies for its financial support of this project, and Florence Lamoureux for soliciting this bibliography and encouraging its timely completion. I also thank Lan Hiang Char, Alice W. Mak, and Shiro Saito of the Asian Collection for their courteous and informed assistance with this and all my research endeavors. I am, of course, solely responsible for any shortcomings and inaccuracies of this work. II TABLE OF CONTENTS Entries Topics 1-22 Bibliographies and Reference Sources 23-40 Collections 41-47 Periodicals 48-67 Critical Works and Reviews of the Field 68-123 The Coming of Islam to Southeast Asian Societies 124-162 Islam in Precolonial Southeast Asian History 163-165 Islam in Colonial History--Southeast Asia 166-197 Islam in Colonial History--Indonesia 198-211 Islam in Colonial History--Malaya, Brunei and Burma 212-247 Islam in Colonial History--The Philippines 248-258 Islam, Resistance and Politics--Southeast Asia 259-368 Islam, Resistance and Politics--Indonesia 369-413 Islam, Resistance and Politics--Malaysia, Brunei and Singapore 414-556 Islam, Resistance and Politics--The Philippines 557-593 Islam, Resiistance and Politics--Thailand, Burma and Kampuchea 594-671 Islamic Culture and Society--General 672-712 Islamic Culture and Society--Mystical and Local Beliefs and Practices 713-757 Islamic Culture and Society--Ritual Practices 758-805 Islamic Culture and Society--Women, Kinship and Marriage 806-868 Islamic Culture and Society--Identities and Relations between Groups iii Entries Topics 869-951 Islamic Culture and SocietynEducation 952-962 Islamic Culture and Society--The Qur'an and Scripture 963-1012 Islamic Culture and SocietynLiterature and Language 1013-1027 Islamic Culture and Society--An and Music 1028-1041 Islamic Culture and Society--Mosques, Gravemarkers and Antiquities 1042-1080 Islam, Trade and Economics 1081-1087 LawnIslamic, Civil and CustomarynSoutheast Asia 1088-1105 lawnIslamic, Civil and Customary--Indonesia 1106-1144 Law--Islamic, Civil and Customary--Malaysia, Singapore and Brunei 1145-1159 Law--Islamic, Civil and CustomarynThe Philippines 1160-1177 lawnRelations between Islamic and Customary Law 1178-1183 Law--Conte:mporary Efforts to Institute Islamic Law--Indonesia and Malaysia 1184-1199 Law--Conte:mporary Efforts to Institute Islamic Law--The Philippines 1200-1204 The Construction of Religions and Conversions to Islam in Contemporary Indonesia 1205-1212 Reformist Movements, Organizations and Ideas--Southeast Asia 1213-1260 Reformist Movements, Organizations and IdeasnIndonesia 1261-1290 Reformist Movements, Organizations and Ideas--Malaysia and Singapore 1291-1292 Reformist Movements. Organizations and Ideasn The Philippines and Thailand 1293-1298 Islam, Modernization and Development--Southeast Asia 1299-1334 Islam, Modernization and Development--Indonesia IV Entries Topics 1335-1352 Islam, Modernization and Development--Malaysia 1353-1368 Islam, Modernization and Development--The Philippines 1369-1371 Islam, Modernization and Development--Thailand 1372-1404 Secular Education and National Integration of Muslim Minorities 1405-1412 International Relations and Transnational Muslim Identities AUTHOR INDEX v BmLIOGRAPHIES AND REFERENCE SOURCES 1. (anon) 1976 Islam in Malay Civilization: A Bibliography. Kuala Lumpur: The University Library, Universiti Kebangsaan. 2. (anon) 1984 Bibliografi IsLam di MaLaysia. Kuala Lumpur: Perpustakaan Negara Malaysia. 3. (anon) 1991 Bibliografi PiLihan tentang Ekonomi Islam, 1970-1990. Bangi: Perpustakaan Tun Seri Lanang, Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia, Siri Bibliografi Umum. 4. Aldea, Virginia L. 1986 Moro Struggle: Selected Bibliography. In: Carmen A. Abubakar, editor, Symposium on Muslim Societies. 1983 Symposia on Muslim Studies Sponsored by the Institute of Islamic Studies, University of the Philippines System. Quezon City: University of the Philippines Press. 5. Boland, B.l. and L Farjon 1983 IsLam in Indonesia: A Bibliographic Survey, l6fJO..1942, with post-1945 addenda. Dordrecht: Foris Publications. 6. Boneff, Marcel and Denys Lombard 1985 Bibliographie Selective. ArchipeL 29: 91-105. 7. Columnas, Edelin Lacaya 1976 Theses and Dissenations on Muslim Filipinos, 1976. Quezon City: University of the Philippines Library. 8. Fil-Filibbin, Markaz As-Shabab Al Muslim 1990 MusLim Directory in the Philippines. Philippines: Muslim Research and Information Foundation. 9. Fortuna, Elsa Magpuyo 1988 Conflict in Mindanao: An Annotated Bibliography. Unpublished M.A. Thesis. University of the Philippines. 10. lundam, Mashur Bin-Ghalib 1983 Bibliography of Muslim Filipinos. In: F. Landa locano, editor, Filipino Muslims: Their SociaL Institutions and CuLturaL Achievements. Quezon City: Asian Center, University of the Philippines, 147-196. 1 11. Madale, Nagasura T., compiler 1981 Recommended Readings. In: Nagasura T. Madale, editor, The Muslim Filipinos: A Book of Readings. Quezon City: Alemar-Phoenix Publishing House, 350-367. 12. Mansoer, Moch Amien, compiler 1977 Bibliograji Pondok Pesantren, 197()"1976. Jakarta: Lembaga Ilmu Pengetahuan Indonesia, Proyek Pengembangun Pusat Dokumentasi dan Informasi Bidang Ilmu-Ilmu Sosial dan Kemanusiaan. 13. Salivio, Primo B. 1990 Gowing Memorial Research Center. Maisie van Vactor Collection of Islamic and Philippine Muslim Materials. Marawi City: Gowing Memorial Research Center, Dansalan College Foundation. 14. Suhardi, Alfons S. 1985 Bibliografi Islam Indonesia. Bandung: Departemen Dokumentasi dan Penerangan
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