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The Religion of Java
 
 
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The Religion of Java (Paperback)

by Clifford Geertz (Author) "MODJOKUTO, the small town in east central Java within which this study was made, lies at the extreme eastern edge of a great irrigated rice..." (more)
Key Phrases: wajang wong, low honorifics, penghulu family, Ministry of Religion, Budi Setia, Ilmu Sedjati (more...)
2.5 out of 5 stars See all reviews (2 customer reviews)

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Editorial Reviews

Product Description
Written with a rare combination of analysis and speculation, this comprehensive study of Javanese religion is one of the few books on the religion of a non-Western people which emphasizes variation and conflict in belief as well as similarity and harmony. The reader becomes aware of the intricacy and depth of Javanese spiritual life and the problems of political and social integration reflected in the religion.

The Religion of Java will interest specialists in Southeast Asia, anthropologists and sociologists concerned with the social analysis of religious belief and ideology, students of comparative religion, and civil servants dealing with governmental policy toward Indonesia and Southeast Asia.


About the Author
Clifford Geertz is the Harold S. Linder Professor of Social Science at the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton. He is the author of many books, including Islam Observed and Peddlars and Princes and, with Hildred Geertz, Kinship in Bali (all published by the University of Chicago Press).

Product Details

  • Paperback: 392 pages
  • Publisher: University Of Chicago Press (February 15, 1976)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0226285103
  • ISBN-13: 978-0226285108
  • Product Dimensions: 8.8 x 6 x 0.8 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.2 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 2.5 out of 5 stars See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.com Sales Rank: #63,855 in Books (See Bestsellers in Books)




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15 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars The Religious and Cultural Landscape in Java, February 22, 2001
By A Customer
Since the release of Clifford Geertzs "The Religion of Java" in 1960, no book dealing with Javanese culture or religon have been written without reference to the work of Geertz. So huge is the influence of this book on Javanese Studies that it has become an impossibility to write about Java and its traditions without consulting this (as it has become) "classic." (The Javanese themselves sometimes consult it!) However, as popular and inevitable as it is, many scholars have a critical view about "The Religion of Java," and the criticism this work has been the object of stems from a variety of reasons. Many scholars of today are of the opinion that Geertz' conclusions do not reflect the Javanese reality (as they percieve it) and thus criticize him on these grounds, but this is somewhat misleading criticism since the Javanese religious and cultural landscape has changed a lot over the last 45 years (Geertz conducted his fieldwork in the late 1950's).

Geertz divides the Javanese society into three "variants," that is Abangan, Santri and Priyayi. With abangan he means those Javanese who are only nominal Muslims, that is the group not performing the five daily prayers prescribed by Islamic law or fasting during the month of Ramadan. The abangan group is the largest variant of religiosity in Java according to Geertz and it is a syncretism of Hindu-, Buddhist-, animistic- and Islamic elements wherein the pre-Islamic elements seem to dominate.

The second "variant" of Javanese religion is the santri, according to Geertz. The santri comprises the Javanese who first and foremost identifies themselves as Muslims (and not Javanese), and they perform according to their abilities the five pillars of Islam (Confession of faith, the five daily prayers, the taxes, fasting during Ramadan, and performing the pilgrimage to Mekkah). According to Geertz, this variant of Javanese religion is very textual oriented and show a great concern with Islamic doctrines, while abangan is more concerned with the ritual aspects of their religious life.

The third variant of the Javanese religiosity is the priyayi which, according to Geertz, is the Hindu cultural elite which primarily is connected to the bureaucratic parts of the society (in contrast to the abangan who are peasants and the santri who are merchants). In saying this, Geertz is often criticized on the basis that priyayi is not a religious grouping in Javanese society, but rahter a social class.

In sum then, Geertz divides the Javanese religious landscape into three different variants: the syncretic abangan, the Islamic santri and the Hindu priyayi.

For everyone seriously interested in Java and its religious, social and cultural life, this book is a must-have, althoug the reader has to take the conclusions drawn with a pinch of salt. As readers we are told a lot about the cultural life of the Javanese, their spiritual beliefs and rituals, their attitude towards magic, and a lot more. We also find a discussion about the differences of opinion that arises between the abangan and santri, and we also learn about the santri educational system and the administratiom of Islamic law in the area where Geertz conducted his fieldwork. Further, we are told about Javanese art- both "classical" and "popular"- and here we are told about the Javanese famous shadow play (wayang), Javanese classical music (gamelan), folk theater (ketoprak), and much more. At the end of the book we also find a discussion of mysticism in Java.

Apart from students and scholars of Javanese/Indonesisan cultural life, anthropologists and sociologists too will probably find this piece of work rewarding to read.

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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Missing the point by a long way..........!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!, November 5, 2006
By jin (this world is not my home) - See all my reviews
If this, as it is often claimed an anthropology classic, then it exposes anthropology as being a very shallow discipline.
The book is a perfect example of the western academics needs to label everything and put it into nice little boxes.
In the case of Java one of the most inscrutable and androgynous cultures of the world, his model was even more inappropriate.

The Javanese world view is a world of shadows, not clear lines, if you want to see the soul of Java you can see it in the Wayang.Javanese society is Structured along invisible unspoken lines and understood in ways that are non intellectual, by its inhabitants.

The Javanese does not think in linear and sequential terms of this or that, to apply a model of Getz type to a society that does not understand itself as such is a non beginner.


The Religion of Java exposes the authors limited understanding of religion, he sees only the surface. He tries to explain the extent to which a so called indonesian group is Islamic by the degree to which it resembles a region in a completely different part of the world; The Middle East.

Most Javanese even at the time, viewed themselves and nothing but muslims and whilst Javanese have in the last few decades began to realize that their world view is at times very much at odds with other parts of the Islamic world,it is no less Islamic per se.

Islam is comprehensible to Javanese in a Sufi context,the Sufi tradition represents an alternative dimension to Islam,that in reality is actually more valid than the exoteric dimension which In essence only superficial.

Geetz, Mulders and many others have taken the view of the literal and more fundamental strains of Islamic culture as their Yardstick for Measuring(yes that is what the are doing in effect) Javanese society and as a result have completely misunderstood the depth of both Islam and Java.

Please read Mark Woodwards :` Between Normative piety and Mysticism in The Sultanate Of Yogjakarta' ...which completely obilerates Geetz Thesis.


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