Challenging Epistemic Hegemony: Islam, Memory, and the Struggle over Southeast Asian History
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.0501/senarai.2025.1.4.236-254Keywords:
Islamic history, Islam in Southeast Asia, Malay-Indonesian Archipelago, orientalism, revisionist, decolonizeAbstract
The historical discourse on Southeast Asia often centers on the introduction, dissemination, and impact of Islam within the Malay-Indonesian Archipelago. Scholars continue to debate whether Islam first entered the region in the 13th century or at an earlier time; whether its origins were rooted in India or came directly from Arabia; and whether its spread was primarily driven by merchants, wandering Sufi mystics, or organized missionaries. Another key question is whether conversion to Islam merely overlaid the existing cultural fabric while leaving traditional practices largely intact, or whether it fundamentally reshaped society’s structures and worldview. This article aims to “decolonize” the historiography of Islam’s arrival and influence in the Malay world by re-examining the claims of European Orientalists alongside those of so-called “Revisionist” historians. The latter have introduced new evidence and reinterpretations that seek to challenge established narratives, distinguish historical fact from constructed myth, and reframe the debate on Islam’s role in shaping the region.
Downloads
References
Andaya, L. Y. (2008). Leaves of the same tree: Trade and ethnicity in the Straits of Melaka. University of Hawaii Press.
Anwar, R. (2009). Sejarah kecil "petite histoire" Indonesia, Vol. 2. Kompas. Arnold, T. W. (1913). The preaching of Islam. Constable.
Arnold, T. W. (1979). Sejarah dakwah Islam (H. A. Nawawi Rambe, Trans.). Widjaja.
Al-Attas, S. H. (1963). On the need for a historical study of Malaysia Islamization. Journal of South-East Asia History, 4(3), 78-80.
Al-Attas, S. M. N. (1969). Preliminary statement on a general theory of the Islamization of the Malay-Indonesian Archipelago. Dewan Bahasa & Pustaka.
Al-Attas, S. M. N. (2011). Historical fact and fiction. UTM Press.
Azmi, W. H. (1993). Islam di Aceh: Masuk dan berkembangnya hingga abad XVI. In A. Hasymy (Ed.), Sejarah masuk dan berkembangnya Islam di Indonesia. Al-Ma‘arif.
Azra, A. (1995). Jaringan ulama Nusantara. Mizan.
Bausani, A. (1964). Note sui vocaboli persiani in malese-indonesiano. Annali dell'Istituto universitario orientale di Napoli, 14, 1–32.
Beg, A. J. (1982). Persian and Turkish Loan-words in Malay. University of Malaya Press. Boland, B. J., & Farjon, I. (1983). Islam in Indonesia: A bibliographical survey, 1600-1942, with post-1945 addenda. Foris Publications.
Broomhall, M. (1910). Islam in China: A neglected problem. Darf Publishers.
Cortesao, A. (1990). The Suma Oriental of Tomé Pires and the book of Francisco Rodrigues. Asian Educational Services.
Crawfurd, S. J. (1820). History of the Indian Archipelago, Vol. 2. Edinburgh.
Drewes, G. W. J. (1985). New Light on the Coming of Islam to Indonesia? In Ahmad Ibrahim et al. (Eds). Readings on Islam in Southeast Asia. ISEAS.
Fatimi, S. Q. (1963). Islam comes to Malaysia. Singapore.
Feener, M. (2004). Hybridity and the Hadhrami Diaspora in the Indian Ocean. Asian Journal of Social Science 32(3), 353-372.
Freitag, U., & Clarence-Smith, W. G. (Eds.) (1997). Hadrami Traders, Scholars and Statesmen in the Indian Ocean, 1750s-1960s. Brill.
Groeneveldt, W.P. (1960). Historical notes on Indonesia & Malaya compiled from Chinese sources. Bhatara.
Hasan, H. (1928). A history of Persian navigation. Methuen.
Hasymy, A. (Ed.). (1993). Sejarah masuk dan berkembangnya Islam di Indonesia. Al-Ma‘arif.
Hill, A.H. (1963). The coming of Islam to North Sumatra. Journal of South-East Asia History, 4, 6-21.
Hourani, G. F. (1995). Arab seafaring in Indian Ocean in Ancient and Early Medieval Times. Princeton University Press.
Hurgronje, C.S. (1911). La propagation de l’Islam, particulièrement dans l’archipel des Indes
Orientales. Revue du Monde Musulman, 14, 381-414.
Hurgronje, C.S. (1923). De Islam in Nederlandsch-Indië. In Verspreide Geschriften, Vol. 4. Kurt Schroeder.
Hurgronje, C.S. (1923). L’Arabie et Les Indes Néerlandaises. In Verspreide Geschriften, vol.4. Kurt Schroeder.
Hurgronje, C.S. (1973). Islam di Hindia Belanda (S. Gunawan, Trans.). Bhatara.
I-Tsing. (1896). A record of the Buddhist religion as practiced in India and the Malay Archipelago (J. Takahusu, Trans.). Clarendon Press.
Jacobsen, F. F. (2011). Hadrami Arabs in present-day Indonesia. Routledge.
Johns, A. H. (1961). Sufism as a category in Indonesian literature and history. Journal of Southeast Asian History, 2(2), 10-23.
Jones, R. (1979). Ten Conversion Myths from Indonesia. In N. Levtzion (Ed.), Conversion to Islam. Holmes.
Kern, R.A. (1938). De Verbreiding van den Islam. In F.W. Stapel (Ed.), Geschiedenis van Nederlandsch-Indië, Vol. 1. Joost van den Vondel.
Laffan, M. F. (2011). The makings of Indonesian Islam: Orientalism and the narration of a Sufi past. PUP.
Landon, K. P. (1949). Southeast Asia: Crossroad of religions. University of Chicago Press. Levtzion, N. (1979). Conversion to Islam. Holmes & Meier.
Lowenthal, D. (1990). The politics of the past (P. Gathercole & D. Lowenthal, Eds.). Unwin Hyman.
Manguin, P.Y. (1979). Etudes cam. II; l’introduction de l’Islam au Campa. Bulletin de l’Ecole Fran-çaise de’Extrême-Orient, 66, 257.
Moquette, J. P. (1912). De Graftsteenen te Pase en Grisse vergeleken met dergelijke monumenten uit Hindoestan. Tijdschrift voor Indische Taal-, Land-, en Volkenkunde (TBG), 54, 536-553.
Moquette, J. P. (1913). De eerste vorsten van Samoedra-Pase (Noord Soematra). Rapporten van den Oudheidkundigen Dienst in Nederlandsch- Indië, 1-12.
Moquette, J. P. (1920). Fabriekswerk. Verhandelingen van het Bataviaasch Genootschap van Kunsten en Wetenschappen (VBG), LVII, 44.
Moquette, J. P. (1921). De oudste Mohammedaansche inscriptie op Java, n.m. de graafsteen te Leran. In Handeligen van het eerste congres voor taal-, land-, en volkenkunde van Java (pp. 391-399). Weltevreden.
Morrison, G.E. (1951). The coming of Islam to East Indies. JMBRAS, 24(1).
Morrison, G. E. (1955). Persian influences in Malay life, 1260-1650. JMBRAS, 28, 52-69. El Muhammady, M. U. (1963). Iman dan Islam: Kuliah. Pustaka Agus Salim.
Müller-Krüger, T. (1966). Sedjarah geredja di Indonesia. Badan Penerbit Kristen.
Muljana, S. (2005). Runtuhnya kerajaan Hindu Jawa dan timbulnya negara-negara Islam di Nusantara. LKiS.
Nakahara, M. (1984). Muslim merchants in Nan-Hai. In R. Israeli et al. (Eds.), Islam in Asia, Vol. 2. Westview.
Peliot, P. (1959). Notes on Marco Polo, I. Maisonneuve.
Pijnappel, D.J. (1872). Over de kennis, die de Arabieren voor de Komst der Portugeezen van den Indischen archipel bezaten. BKI, 19, 135-158.
Polo, M. (1866). Cathay and the way thither, Vol. 2 (H. Yule, Trans.). London.
Purbatjaraka, P. (1961). Shahbandars in the Archipelago. Journal of Southeast Asian History, 2, 1-9.
Ravaisse, P. (1925). L’inscription coufique de Léran à Java. In Tijdschrift voor Indische Taal-, Land-, en Volkenkunde, 65, 668-703.
Schrieke, B. J. O. (1957). The ruler and realm in early Java. W. van Hoeve. Suryanegara, A. M. (2009). Api sejarah. Salamadani.
Tibbetts, G.R. (1979). A study of the Arabic texts containing materials on South-east Asia. Brill.
Tjandrasasmita, U. (2000). Pertumbuhan dan perkembangan kota-kota Muslim di Indonesia dari abad XIII sampai XVIII Masehi. Penerbit Menara Kudus.
Usman, Z. (1963). Kesusasteraan lama Indonesia. Gunung Agoeng.
Van den Bergh, H. J., Kroeskamp, H., Prijohutomo, & Simandjoentak, I.P. (1954). Asia dan dunia sedjak 1500: Sedjarah umum dalam bentuk monograph. J.B. Wolters.
Van den End, Th. (2007). Ragi carita 1: Sejarah gereja di Indonesia th. 1500 – 1860-an. Gunung Mulia.
Van Leur, J. C. (1955). Indonesian trade and society. Van Hoeve.
Vann, R. T. (n.d.). Historiography. Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved April 16, 2020. Wertheim, F. W. (1956). Indonesian society in transition: A study of social change. W. van Hoeve.
Wink, A. (1991). Al-Hind: The Making of the Indo-Islamic World (1991), Vol. 1. Brill. Winstedt, R. O. (1951). The Malay magician: Being shaman, saiva and Sufi. Routledge & Kegan Paul.
Yule, S. H. (1903). Hobson-Jobson: A glossary of colloquial Anglo-Indian words and phrases, and of kindred terms, etymological, historical, geographical and discursive. John Murray.
Yule, S. H. (1929). The book of Ser Marco Polo. London.
Downloads
Published
Issue
Section
Citation Check
License
Copyright (c) 2025 Journal of Islamic Heritage and Civilization

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.
License and Copyright Agreement
In submitting the manuscript to the journal, the authors certify that:
- They are authorized by their co-authors to enter into these arrangements.
- The work described has not been formally published before, except in the form of an abstract or as part of a published lecture, review, thesis, or overlay journal.
- That it is not under consideration for publication elsewhere,
- That its publication has been approved by all the author(s) and by the responsible authorities – tacitly or explicitly – of the institutes where the work has been carried out.
- They secure the right to reproduce any material that has already been published or copyrighted elsewhere.
- They agree to the following license and copyright agreement.
Copyright
Authors who publish with Senarai: Journal of Islamic Heritage and Civilization Issues agree to the following terms:
- Authors retain copyright and grant the journal right of first publication with the work simultaneously licensed under a The Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0) that allows others to share the work with an acknowledgement of the work's authorship and initial publication in this journal.
- Authors are able to enter into separate, additional contractual arrangements for the non-exclusive distribution of the journal's published version of the work (e.g., post it to an institutional repository or publish it in a book), with an acknowledgement of its initial publication in this journal.
- Authors are permitted and encouraged to post their work online (e.g., in institutional repositories or on their website) prior to and during the submission process, as it can lead to productive exchanges, as well as earlier and greater citation of published work.


