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职称:professor
所属学校:University of California-Riverside
所属院系:Asian Studies
所属专业:Asian Studies/Civilization
联系方式:(951) 827-5111
Born in Jakarta, Indonesia, Muhamad Ali, Ph.D. is currently an assistant professor in Islamic Studies, Department of Religious Studies, and an affiliated faculty member in the program of Southeast Asia: Text, Ritual and Performance (SEATRIP), University of California, Riverside. He received his B.A. in Islamic studies from the State Islamic University (Indonesia), a M.Sc. from the Department of Islamic and Middle Eastern Studies at the University of Edinburgh (Scotland), and a Ph.D. in history (focusing on Southeast Asia) from the University of Hawaii at Manoa. His publications include two books: Multicultural-Pluralist Theology (Teologi Pluralis Multikultural, 2003) and Bridging Islam and the West: An Indonesian View (2009). His manuscript on colonialism and Islamic knowledge in Kelantan and South Sulawesi is under review, and he is working on another manuscript on the history of religious freedom and pluralism in Indonesia. His encyclopedia entries include gender jihad (Encyclopaedia of Women and Islamic Culture,2004), the Hizbut Tahrir Indonesia (Blackwell Encyclopedia of Postcolonial Studies, 2011) and Islamic Liberalism in Southeast Asia (Oxford Islamic Studies Online, forthcoming). His journal articles includeFatwas on interfaith marriage in Indonesia (Studia Islamika, 2003); the rise of liberal Islam in Indonesia (American Journal of Islamic Social Sciences, 2005); Transmission of Islamic Knowledge in Kelantan (Journal of the Malaysian Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society, 2006), Categorizing Muslims in Postcolonial Indonesia (Moussons, 2007); They are Not All Alike: Indonesian Muslims Perception of Judaism and Jews (Indonesia and the Malay World, 2010). His book chapters include Islam in Southeast Asia (in Politikens Bog Om Islam, 2009), the Internet, Cyber-Religion and Authority: the Case of Indonesian Liberal Islam Network (in Islam and Popular Culture in Indonesia and Malaysia, 2011), and Liberal Islamic Thought on Revelation and Religious Pluralism (forthcoming). He teaches graduate seminars, including Public Discourses in Modern Islam; Religion, Politics, Public Discourses; Approaches to Islam in Religious Studies; and Southeast Asian Religions, and undergraduate courses, including Religions in Asia, Religions in Southeast Asia, Islam in Southeast Asia, Islam, Reading the Qur’an, and Topics in Modern Islam. He can be contacted at muhamad.ali@ucr.edu
Born in Jakarta, Indonesia, Muhamad Ali, Ph.D. is currently an assistant professor in Islamic Studies, Department of Religious Studies, and an affiliated faculty member in the program of Southeast Asia: Text, Ritual and Performance (SEATRIP), University of California, Riverside. He received his B.A. in Islamic studies from the State Islamic University (Indonesia), a M.Sc. from the Department of Islamic and Middle Eastern Studies at the University of Edinburgh (Scotland), and a Ph.D. in history (focusing on Southeast Asia) from the University of Hawaii at Manoa. His publications include two books: Multicultural-Pluralist Theology (Teologi Pluralis Multikultural, 2003) and Bridging Islam and the West: An Indonesian View (2009). His manuscript on colonialism and Islamic knowledge in Kelantan and South Sulawesi is under review, and he is working on another manuscript on the history of religious freedom and pluralism in Indonesia. His encyclopedia entries include gender jihad (Encyclopaedia of Women and Islamic Culture,2004), the Hizbut Tahrir Indonesia (Blackwell Encyclopedia of Postcolonial Studies, 2011) and Islamic Liberalism in Southeast Asia (Oxford Islamic Studies Online, forthcoming). His journal articles includeFatwas on interfaith marriage in Indonesia (Studia Islamika, 2003); the rise of liberal Islam in Indonesia (American Journal of Islamic Social Sciences, 2005); Transmission of Islamic Knowledge in Kelantan (Journal of the Malaysian Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society, 2006), Categorizing Muslims in Postcolonial Indonesia (Moussons, 2007); They are Not All Alike: Indonesian Muslims Perception of Judaism and Jews (Indonesia and the Malay World, 2010). His book chapters include Islam in Southeast Asia (in Politikens Bog Om Islam, 2009), the Internet, Cyber-Religion and Authority: the Case of Indonesian Liberal Islam Network (in Islam and Popular Culture in Indonesia and Malaysia, 2011), and Liberal Islamic Thought on Revelation and Religious Pluralism (forthcoming). He teaches graduate seminars, including Public Discourses in Modern Islam; Religion, Politics, Public Discourses; Approaches to Islam in Religious Studies; and Southeast Asian Religions, and undergraduate courses, including Religions in Asia, Religions in Southeast Asia, Islam in Southeast Asia, Islam, Reading the Qur’an, and Topics in Modern Islam. He can be contacted at muhamad.ali@ucr.edu