References
- Alatas, Ismail Fajrie. 2020. “Dreaming Saints: Exploratory Authority and Islamic Praxes of History in Central Java.” Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute 26 (1): 67–85. doi:10.1111/1467-9655.13177
- Amrith, Sunil S. 2013. Crossing the Bay of Bengal. The Furies of Nature and the Fortune of Migrants. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.
- App, Urs. 2010. The Birth of Orientalism. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press.
- Appadurai, Arjun. 2010. “How Histories Make Geographies. Circulation and Context in a Global Perspective.” Transcultural Studies 1: 4–13.
- Asad, Talal. 1993. Geneaologies of Religion: Disciplines and Reasons of Power in Christianity and Islam. Baltimore: The John Hopkins University Press.
- Asad, Talal. 2003. Formations of the Secular: Christianity, Islam, Modernity. Stanford: Stanford University Press.
- Bayly, Susan. 2004. “Imaging 'Greater India’: French and Indian Visions of Colonialism in the Indic Mode.” Modern Asian Studies 38 (3): 703–744.
- Bloembergen, Marieke. 2017. “Borobudur in ‘the Light of Asia’. Scholars, Pilgrims and Knowledge Networks of Greater India, 1920s-1970s.” In Belonging Across the Bay of Bengal: Rites, Migrations, Rites, edited by Michael Laffan, 35–56. London: Bloomsbury.
- Bloembergen, Marieke. 2018. “New Spiritual Movements, Scholars, and ‘Greater India in Indonesia, 1920s–1970s’.” In Modern Times in Southeast Asia, 1920s-1970s, edited by Susie Protschky, and Tom van den Berge, 57–86. Leiden: Brill.
- Bloembergen, Marieke. 2021. “The Politics of ‘Greater India,’ a Moral Geography: Moveable Antiquities and Charmed Knowledge Networks between Indonesia, India and the West.” Comparative Studies in Society and History 63 (1): 170–211.
- Bloembergen, Marieke, and Martijn Eickhoff. 2013. “Exchange and the Protection of Java’s Antiquities: A Transnational Approach to the Problem of Heritage in Colonial Java.” Journal of Asian Studies 72 (4): 1–24.
- Bloembergen, Marieke, and Martijn Eickhoff. 2020. The Politics of Heritage in Indonesia. A Cultural History. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
- Boyer, Dominic. 2008. “Thinking Through the Anthropology of Experts.” Anthropology in Action 15 (2): 38–46.
- Carr, E. Summerson. 2010. “Enactments of Expertise.” Annual Review of Anthropology 39: 17–32. doi:10.1146/annurev.anthro.012809.104948
- Cooper, Frederick. 2005. Colonialism in Question: Theory, Knowledge, History. Berkeley: University of California Press.
- Dayeh, Islam. 2016. “The Potential of World Philology.” Philological Encounters 1 (1): 396–418. doi:10.1163/24519197-00000004
- Fedele, Anna, and Kim E. Knibbe. 2013. Gender and Power in Contemporary Spirituality: Ethnographic Approaches. London and New York: Routledge.
- Feener, R. Michael, and Joshua Gedacht, eds. 2018. Challenging Cosmopolitanism: Coercion, Mobility and Displacement in Islamic Asia. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press.
- Geary, David. 2013. “Rebuilding the Navel of the Earth: Buddhist Pilgrimage and Transnational Religious Networks.” Modern Asian Studies 48 (3): 645–692. doi:10.1017/S0026749X12000881
- Green, Nile. 2018. “The Waves of Heterotopia: Toward a Vernacular Intellectual History of the Indian Ocean.” American Historical Review 2018: 846–874. doi:10.1093/ahr/123.3.846
- Hallaq, Wael B. 2018. Restating Orientalism: A Critique of Modern Knowledge. New York: Columbia University Press.
- Harper, Tim. 1997. “Globalism and the Pursuit of Authenticity; The Making of a Diasporic Public Sphere in Singapore.” Sojourn (singapore) 12 (2): 261–292. doi:10.1355/SJ12-2E
- Harper, Tim, and Sunil Amrith. 2012. “Sites of Asian Interaction: An Introduction.” Modern Asian Studies 46 (2): 249–257. doi:10.1017/S0026749X12000108
- Ho, Engseng. 2006. The Graves of Tarim: Geneology and Mobility Across the Indian Ocean. Berkeley: University of California Press.
- Hoesterey, James B. 2016. Rebranding Islam: Piety, Prosperity, and a Self-Help Guru. Stanford: Stanford University Press.
- Kahn, Joel. 2015. Asia, Modernity and the Pursuit of the Sacred. Gnostics, Scholars, Mystics and Reformers. Houndmills, Basingstoke, Hampshire, and New York, NY: Palgrave Macmillan.
- King, Richard. 1999. Orientalism and Religion; Postcolonial Theory, India and ‘the Mystic East’. New York: Routledge.
- Kingston, Ralph. 2010. “Mind Over Matter? History and the Spatial Turn.” Cultural and Social History 7 (1): 111–121.
- Kloos, David. 2018. Becoming Better Muslims: Religious Authority and Ethical Improvement in Aceh, Indonesia. Princeton: Princeton University Press.
- Kloos, David. 2019. “Experts Beyond Discourse. Women, Islamic Authority and the Performance of Professionalism in Malaysia.” American Ethnologist 46 (2): 162–175. doi:10.1111/amet.12762
- Laffan, Michael. 2011. The Makings of Indonesian Islam: Orientalism and the Narration of a Sufi Past. Princeton: Princeton University Press.
- Laffan, Michael. 2017. “Introduction: Dhows, Steamers, Lifeboats.” In Belonging Across the Bay of Bengal: Rites, Migrations, Rites, edited by Michael Laffan, 1–14. London: Bloomsbury.
- Lardinois, Roland. 2007. L’Invention de l’Inde. Entre Éotérisme et Science. Paris: CNRS Editions.
- Lewis, Su Lin. 2016. Cities in Motion: Urban Life and Cosmopolitanism in Southeast Asia, 1920-1940. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
- Marchand, Suzanne L. 2009. German Orientalism in the Age of Empire: Religion, Race, and Scholarship. New York: Cambridge University Press.
- Mazusawa, Tomoko. 2005. The Invention of World Religions. Or, How European Universalism was Preserved in the Language of Pluralism. Chicago: The University of Chicago Press.
- Middell, Matthias, and Katja Naumann. 2010. “Global History and the Spatial Turn: From the Impact of Area Studies to the Study of Critical Junctures of Globalization.” Journal of Global History 5: 149–170.
- Moll, Yasmin. 2018. “Television is not Radio: Theologies of Mediation in the Egyptian Islamic Revival.” Cultural Anthropology 33 (2): 233–265. doi:10.14506/ca33.2.07
- Paramore, Kiri ed. 2016. Religion and Orientalism in Asian Studies. London: Bloomsbury.
- Protschky, Susie. 2020. “Disaster in Indonesia: Along the Fault Lines Toward New Approaches.” Indonesia 113: April 2022, 1–8. doi:10.1353/ind.2022.0000
- Ricci, Ronit. 2011. Islam Translated; Literature, Conversion, and the Arabic Cosmopolis of South and Southeast Asia. Chicago: Chicago University Press.
- Ricci, Ronit, ed. 2016. Exile in Colonial Asia: Kings, Convicts, Commemoration. Honolulu: University of Hawai’i Press.
- Sevea, Teren. 2020. Miracles and Material Life: Rice, Ore, Traps, and Guns in Islamic Malaya. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
- Singh, Upinder. 2010. “Exile and Return: The Reinvention of Buddhism and Buddhist Sites in Modern India.” Journal of South Asian Studies 26 (2): 193–217. doi:10.1080/02666030.2010.514744
- Starrett, Gregory. 1998. Putting Islam to Work: Education, Politics, and Religious Transformation in Egypt. Berkeley: University of California Press.
- Van der Veer, Peter. 2013. The Modern Spirit of Asia: The Spiritual and the Secular in China and India. Princeton: Princeton University Press.
- Warf, Barney, and Santa Arias, eds. 2008. The Spatial Turn: Interdisciplinary perspectives. Abingdon and New York: Routledge.
- Wimmer, Andreas, and Nina Glick Schiller. 2002. “Methodological Nationalism and Beyond: Nation–State Building, Migration and the Social Sciences.” Global Networks 2 (4): 301–334. doi:10.1111/1471-0374.00043
- Winichakul, Tongchai. 1994. Siam Mapped. A History of the geo-Body of a Nation. Honolulu: The University of Hawai’i Press.
- Withers, C. W. J. 2009. “Place and the ‘Spatial Turn’ in Geography and History.” Journal of the History of Ideas 7 (4): 637–658.
- Wuthnow, Robert. 2020. What Happens When We Practice Religion? Textures of Devotion in Everyday Life. Princeton: Princeton University Press.