%0 Journal Article %A JAMES V. SPICKARD, %D 2009 %F digilib:666 %I Perpustakaan UIN Sunan Kalijaga Yogyakarta %J /Jurnal/Sosiologi Reflektif/Volume 2, No.1, Oktober 2007/ %K Suku-suku, Kota-kota, Sosiologi Agama Islam %T SUKU-SUKU DAN KOTA-KOTA : Menuju Sosiologi Agama Islam %U https://digilib.uin-suka.ac.id/id/eprint/666/ %X Mainstream sociology of religion often presumes that its conceptual categories are universal and complete. They are, however, grounded in the Western intellectual tradition and arise from that tradition’s reflection on Euro-American history. This article outlines an alternative sociology of religion based on the writings of the 14th ¾century Moslem historian Ibn-Khaldun¾whose ideas arise from a very different world. His sociology is not grounded in individuals, nor does it focus only on religious beliefs and institutions. Instead it emphasizes the distinction between tribes and cities as forms of social organization, the importance of Al ‘Assabiyya or “group feeling� in social life, and the special role of Islam in transforming that feeling. This locates religious individualism and institutionalism at distinct points in an historical cycle, throwing new light on debates about religious authority, popular religion, and secularization. It also highlights the connections between religion and ethnicity¾helping us to understand key late 20th century phenomena.