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Journal : Jurnal ASPIKOM

CONSUMING GENDER AND DISABILITY IN INDONESIAN FILM Novi Kurnia
Jurnal ASPIKOM - Jurnal Ilmu Komunikasi Vol 3, No 3 (2017): Juli 2017
Publisher : Asosiasi Pendidikan Tinggi Ilmu Komunikasi (ASPIKOM)

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | Full PDF (529.891 KB) | DOI: 10.24329/aspikom.v3i3.175

Abstract

This study aims to examine the film audience reception on gender and disabilities representation towards What We Don’t Talk About When We Talk About Love (Yang Tidak Dibicarakan Ketika Membicarakan Cinta, 2013). This film directed by a prominent Indonesian woman film director, Mouly Surya, and produced in 2013.  Such audience study is very important in the scholarship of women and Indonesian films dominated by studies on women representation in the film and women filmmakers. Employing reception analysis based on Stuart Hall’s work, this study involves six Indonesian students as informant of a series of in-depth interviews.  The study finds that the personal experiences and knowledge of informants, as well as their film habits, but not their gender, influences their interpretation toward the issue of gender and disabilities in the film.
Sentiment analysis and actor mapping in media coverage of the forced hijab case at SMAN 1 Banguntapan Ine Yudhawati; Ana Nadhya Abrar; Novi Kurnia
Jurnal ASPIKOM - Jurnal Ilmu Komunikasi Vol 10, No 2 (2025): Jurnal ASPIKOM
Publisher : Asosiasi Pendidikan Tinggi Ilmu Komunikasi (ASPIKOM)

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.24329/aspikom.v10i2.1697

Abstract

This study examines online media coverage of the alleged forced hijab case at SMAN 1 Banguntapan using actor mapping and sentiment analysis. Based on a quantitative content analysis of 72 news articles published during the peak period of the case (July 31–August 7, 2022), the findings show a strong dominance of negative sentiment and a concentration on institutional actors, while victims and civil society voices were marginalized. Media narratives largely emphasized conflict and polarization rather than reconciliation. Such framing may normalize exclusionary discourses, reinforce perceptions of intolerance, and constrain more inclusive understandings of religious diversity.