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The Unwritten Conventions: Gender-Based Role Expectations and Rivalry among Indonesia Army Wives Puspitosari, Wida Ayu; Purwandi, Edeliya Relanika
Masyarakat: Jurnal Sosiologi Vol. 25, No. 2
Publisher : UI Scholars Hub

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Abstract

This paper deploys an ethnographic research of gender-based role expectation of Indonesia army wives. Its aim is to question wives’ positionality vis-à-vis the military institution and consider the implication for how to understand the unwritten conventions and codes to be army wives itself. This paper asserts that the expectation for wives are culturally gendered role that are different for seniors’ and junior’s army wives. To address these points, we discuss the meaning of gendered roles, then progress through a brief history of military marriage procedures, then discuss current expectations for and perception of army wives. We then evaluate the extent to which gendered role expectations continue to ref lect rivalry among army wives before concluding with assertion about what today’s stereotypes and role expectation say about social progress in Indonesia army.
META-RESEARCH OF KOMUNITAS PENGKAJI KOMUNIKASI: MAINSTREAMING ALTERNATIVE FIELDS AMIDST INDONESIA COMMUNICATION ACADEMIA Purwandi, Edeliya Relanika; Safitri, Reza
Jurnal Ilmiah Global Education Vol. 4 No. 4 (2023): JURNAL ILMIAH GLOBAL EDUCATION, Volume 4 Nomor 4, Desember 2023
Publisher : LPPM Institut Pendidikan Nusantara Global

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.55681/jige.v4i4.1444

Abstract

This research recommends meta-research as one of propitious research methods in mainstreaming the alternative fields amidst Indonesia’s communication academia. Our thesis came from the scrutiny of Komunitas Pengkaji Komunikasi (KPK) intellectual activism. It questioned and intervened the lacking alternative fields within Indonesia’s communication scholarships. We analyzed 48 documents from varying of KPK’s research publications related to the epistemological cues for knowing the verstehen worldview of KPK’s intellectual craftsmen. Harnessing Miles, Huberman & Saldana’s interactive analysis method, our findings reiterated on how KPK alternative fields development had embraced unorthodox research outputs. KPK also had closely enquired an inclusive interparty collaboration. KPK also enforced the research and advocacy endeavours. Yet reflecting from 48 document findings, we expected for more rigorous literature studies of the extended field of interests. We end by calling for larger Indonesian communication scholars to enforce field diversity against the saturated fields, likened to what KPK has endured insofar.
Humour as a new social movement of start-up workers on @Ecommurz Instagram Anang; Dicky Wahyudi; Purwandi, Edeliya Relanika
Jurnal Studi Komunikasi Vol. 9 No. 3 (2025)
Publisher : Faculty of Communications Science, Dr. Soetomo University

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.25139/jsk.v9i3.10999

Abstract

This study examined the discourse of a new social movement of start-up workers through the modality of humour produced by the Instagram account @Ecommurz Indonesia. Using multimodal critical discourse analysis of a 150-content corpus in 2023, this analysis focuses on ideational, interpersonal, and textual symbols. This finding shows that humour on @ecommurz serves as a mobilisation engine for startup workers. Six prominent ideas were identified: labour exploitation, low income, divestment, investment, petitions, and layoffs. Visually, direct eye contact, parallel angles, and popular personas reduce audience distance, while the opening-interruption-closing narrative pattern, clean typography, contrast in meaning, and hashtags unify interpretation and accelerate dissemination. Intertextuality (brand parody, political nostalgia) strengthens critical power and sarcasm. This combination produces shareable humour with criticism, builds collective identity and shared memory, and triggers organic participation on social media. Thus, humour expands cross-professional coalitions and affirms its role as a repertoire of new social movements on social media, particularly in the discourse of Indonesian start-ups.