Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/5556
Title: Hamka’s Contribution to the Field of Anthropology: Another Perspective on Hamka’s Work
Authors: Alexander Stark 
Khairul Hisyam Baharuddin 
Keywords: Anthropology;Ethnography;Hamka;Minangkabau
Issue Date: 2023
Publisher: IIUM Press
Journal: Al-Itqan. Journal of Islamic Sciences and Comparative Studies 
Abstract: 
Hamka (Haji Abdul Malik Karim Amrullah) was one of the most prominent Islamic scholars. His work is widespread in Malay-speaking countries. In this paper, the researchers examine a different perspective, namely, on how far Hamka contributed to the field of anthropology. Hamka spent more than four months travelling in the United States and some Arab nations in the 1950s. He published his observations and came to some thought-provoking conclusions. Furthermore, he expressed his views about the people of Nusantara in many of his works. The researchers followed an approach of the sociology of knowledge in the sense of Karl Mannheim. The social position or the passage of time are two circumstances that may cause knowledge and perceptions to shift. It was discovered that some of Hamka’s views concern anthropological questions. Additionally, it was detected that he considered traditional anthropological concepts and participated in discussions. He gave an impression of the history of ideas within a society. Hamka used precise methods to communicate his knowledge, including realistic case studies and descriptions of his own experiences. He made a variety of contributions to anthropological knowledge and emphasised emic understanding.
Description: 
Mycite
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/5556
ISSN: 2600-8432
Appears in Collections:Journal Indexed MyCite - FBI

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