Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://ir.lib.seu.ac.lk/handle/123456789/6031
Title: Violations of Islamic law in male–female relations: the shifting of nyubuk tradition of the customary peoples of Lampung
Authors: Suhairi
Nurjanah, Siti
Zuhri Qudsy, Saifuddin
Abror, Khoirul
Wijayati, Mufliha
Alimuddin, Agus
Razick, Ahmed Sarjoon
Tajudin, Anas
Keywords: legal violations
Islamic law
youth relationships
local tradition
social media
Issue Date: 3-Jan-2022
Publisher: Richtmann Publishing
Citation: Academic Journal of Interdisciplinary Studies ; Vol 11 No 1 pp. 93-103.
Abstract: Advances in media and communication technology have wrought significant shifts in the nyubuk tradition of the customary peoples of Lampung Pepadun. Male–female relations, once clearly regulated by customary doctrine through nyubuk, are now mediated by social media technology that facilitates the violation of customary and Islamic laws. This article examines how nyubuk, a cultural medium for communication that has traditionally been used in spouse selection, has shifted as social media has become widely available. More specifically, it seeks to understand how the nyubuk tradition has come to disappear without any significant resistance. In doing so, it applies a qualitative descriptive approach, with data having been collected through interviews. This study finds that despite generations of practice, shifting social and cultural practices have threatened nyubuk with extinction, and the practice has increasingly been replaced by social media. As a result, behaviors that violate social and religious norms have become increasingly common in society. Male–female relations, traditionally regulated under Islamic norms through nyubuk, have become increasingly open as cultural spaces have been replaced by social media. This has facilitated transgressions and other violations of Islamic law by young men and women. Obeisance of religious law depends significantly on local cultural authorities, and where these authorities are ignored, once dominant laws and practices may become extinct
URI: https://doi.org/10.36941/ajis-2022-0008
http://ir.lib.seu.ac.lk/handle/123456789/6031
ISSN: 2281-4612
2281-3993
Appears in Collections:Research Articles

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