Abstract

In the urban villages of Bandung, the capital city of the Indonesian province of West Java, many Muslim women routinely attend between four and six oratorical and/or pedagogical events per week. This article analyses this participation by observing the forms and patterns of these women’s spectatorship, specifically observing their mobility, the interaction between their life‐cycles and their participation habits, the gendered embodiment of Islamic knowledge they display, the effect of hegemonic masculinities, and preaching performances which treat them not only as Muslims intent on increasing their Islamic knowledge, but also as pleasure‐taking subjects. The article concludes that the conduct and management of preaching events intended for mixed audiences are highly sensitive to women’s spectatorship and warns against the assumption that Islamic practice is a punishing sphere of patriarchy. In fact, when the influence of women’s spectatorship on the conduct and management of such preaching events is appreciated, West Java’s preaching events appear as a feminised domain.

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