Abstract
This article assumes that language is not only a way of saying things (informative), but also a way of doing things (performative) or exercising power. Through conducting eight focus group discussions (FGDs) involving 39 Christian participants in Surakarta Central Java, this research studies the Christians’ discourse on their fellow Muslims. In those FGDs, I stimulated the participants’ discussion by the basic question, “How do you speak about Muslims”. Though the question is about Muslims, but in fact sometimes they also speak about themselves. I am concerned about the discursive study of religion taking advantage from Norman Fairclough’s discourse analysis theory and method focusing on the analysis of linguistic practice, discursive practice, and social practice. As a result, the discussions of participants were on a hegemonic struggle between dominant and peripheral voices to define what is considered “[ab]normal” Muslims. Christian participants identified extremist (fanatical, fundamentalist) Muslims as abnormal. They positioned extremists and excessive persons as extraordinary. Thus, they identified extremism as not the norm but an exception to the rule of religions. In distinguishing between “normal” and “extreme” the participants primarily positioned themselves as normal or ordinary religious people who are moderate. They identified those who cause conflict as neither moderate Muslims nor moderate Christians, but fundamentalists in their respective faiths.
Highlights
The concept of identity emerged in the social sciences and humanities as a core concept in the 1950s (Gleason, 1983)
Method of Analysis and Data This study relies on discourse analysis
The analysis aims to reveal three different levels of discursive process: micro, meso- and macro-level practices through critical discourse analysis
Summary
The concept of identity emerged in the social sciences and humanities as a core concept in the 1950s (Gleason, 1983). 242 Discursive Study of Christians’ Voice about Muslim’s Identity in Surakarta, Central Java hundreds of thousands, of books and articles (Wetherell, 2010, p.3). It remains a highly controversial concept (Giddens, 1991; Kim, 2002). Margareth Wetherell reformulates the trends in scholars’ conceptualization of identity She points out current theoretical shifts to intersectional and hybrid trends in the study of identity (Wetherell, 2010). This article follows the latter trend (identity as a hybrid), since in most cases identities are not based on innate properties that can be measured according to objective criteria The classification into santri and non-santri or abangan is not fixed but fluid and flexible (Beatty, 1999)
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