Muslim Rulers and Rebels |
Acknowledgments |
Introduction Extraordinary and Everyday Politics in the Muslim Philippines |
Chapter 1 The Politics of Heritage |
• | National Sentiment, Social Distance, and the Problem of Adherence |
• | Interrogating Hegemony |
• | Hegemony, Nationalism, and the Investigation of Armed Separatism |
Chapter 2 People and Territory in Cotabato |
• | The Land |
The People |
• | The Magindanaon |
• | The Iranun |
• | The Tiruray |
• | Contemporary Cotabato: The Region and City |
• | The Community of Campo Muslim |
Chapter 3 Islamic Rule in Cotabato |
• | Representations of the Precolonial Order |
Precolonial Governance and its Idealization in Cotabato |
• | From Heterarchy to Hierarchy:The Decline of Local Descent Groups |
• | Islamization and the Myth of Sanctified Inequality |
Ideological Incorporation and Rank Competition within the Aristocracy |
• | Ruling Ideas and the Incorporation of Subordinates |
Interpreting Political Relations in Precolonial Cotabato |
• | Alternative Sources of Political Control |
• | Summary: The Bases of Traditional Rule |
Chapter 4 European Impositions and the Myth of Morohood |
• | A Tributary Mode of Production |
• | External Acquisitions and the Flow of Tribute |
• | Precolonial Cotabato and European Mercantile Expansion |
• | Spanish Aggression and the Myth of a Unified "Moro" Resistance |
Chapter 5 America's Moros |
Cotabato Under Spanish and American Rule: The Emergence of a Collaborationist Elite |
• | Colonial Policy and the Cotabato Triumvirate |
• | Datu Piang |
• | Datu Ignacio Ortuoste |
• | Datu Sinsuat Balabaran |
• | Colonial-Era Datus and the Continuation of "Traditional" Rule |
Colonial Agents and the Constitution of Moro Identity |
• | Datu Salipada K. Pendatun |
Chapter 6 Postcolonial Transitions |
• | Christian Immigrants and the Peripheralization of Rural Muslims |
• | Muslim Migration to Cotabato City |
Postcolonial Datus and the Persistence of Autocratic Rule |
• | Datu Udtug Matalam |
• | Islamic Identity in the New Republic |
Chapter 7 Muslim Separatism and the Bangsamoro Rebellion |
The Emergence of a Muslim Counterelite |
• | The Commission on National Integration and the Generation of Muslim Separatism |
• | Middle Eastern Educations and the Formation of an Islamic Counterelite |
• | Datu Udtug Matalam and the Muslim Independence Movement |
Sectarian Violence in Cotabato |
• | Episode 1: "Toothpick" and the Tiruray Resistance |
• | Episode 2: Provincial Elections, Ilaga Terror, and the Manili Massacre |
• | Episode 3: Repudiating the Ampatuans |
• | Episode 4: "The Battle of Buldun" |
• | The Aims and Consequences of Sectarian Violence |
Martial Law and the Bangsamoro Rebellion |
• | The Activation of the Moro National Liberation Front |
• | The Insurgency in Cotabato |
• | Rebel Leadership in Cotabato |
• | Magindanaon Datus and the Rebellion |
• | The War of Representations |
Chapter 8 Regarding the War from Campo Muslim |
• | The Bangsamoro War and the Meaning of Campo Muslim |
The Construction of Campo Muslim |
• | The Case of Kasan Kamid |
• | The Case of Imam Akmad |
• | Patterns of Immigration to Campo Muslim |
• | The War in Campo Muslim |
The War from Campo Muslim |
• | The Experiences of Rank-and-File Insurgents |
• | Rank-and-File Perspectives: Rebel Songs in Campo Muslim |
• | Divine Mercy and Divergent Evaluations: The Rebellion According to its Ordinary Adherents |
• | Conclusion |
Chapter 9 Unarmed Struggle |
• | The Rise of an Independent Ulama and Islamic Renewal |
The MILF and the New Opposition Alliance |
• | Child Sponsorship and Christian Hegemony in Campo Muslim |
• | The Counterelite Consolidated: The MILF-ULAMA-Professional Coalition |
• | Traditional Elites and the Post-Rebellion Establishment |
• | The Struggle for Moral Authority in Cotabato |
Popular Opinions and Pragmatic Responses |
• | Scrutinizing the Independent Ulama |
• | Disregarding Traditional Authority |
• | Conclusion |
Chapter 10 Muslim Nationalism after Marcos |
• | The Tagumpay Ng Bayan Rally: Popular Protest and the Ascendancy of the Muslim Counterelite |
• | Muslim Mass Action: The MILF "Prayer Rally" |
Islam, Populism, and Electoral Politics: The 1988 Provincial Elections |
• | The Islamic Party of the Philippines |
• | Islamic Arguments in the Radio Campaign |
• | Islamic Populism and Cultural Pluralism |
Municipal Elections in Cotabato City: The Limits to Islamic Unity |
• | Local Elections and the Muslim Urban Poor |
• | Conclusion |
Chapter 11 Resistance and Rule in Cotabato |
• | Ruling Ideas and The Popular Imagination |
Colonial Subjection and the Constitution of Philippine Muslim Identity |
• | Strategic Maneuvers and Unauthorized Inventions |
• | Popular Participation in the Bangsamoro Rebellion |
• | Unarmed Struggle and Islamic Renewal |
• | Conclusion |
NOTES |
• | Abbreviations |
• | Introduction Extraordinary and Everyday Politics in the Muslim Philippines |
• | Chapter 1 The Politics of Heritage |
• | Chapter 2 People and Territory in Cotabato |
• | Chapter 3 Islamic Rule in Cotabato |
• | Chapter 4 European Impositions and the Myth of Morohood |
• | Chapter 5 America's Moros |
• | Chapter 6 Postcolonial Transitions |
• | Chapter 7 Muslim Separatism and the Bangsamoro Rebellion |
• | Chapter 8 Regarding the War from Campo Muslim |
• | Chapter 9 Unarmed Struggle |
• | Chapter 10 Muslim Nationalism after Marcos |
• | Chapter 11 Resistance and Rule in Cotabato |
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Index |
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