Vebbi Andra
Universitas Islam Negeri Fatmawati Sukarno Bengkulu

Published : 2 Documents Claim Missing Document
Claim Missing Document
Check
Articles

Found 2 Documents
Search

Mapping personality signaling in Indonesian popular prose: A qualitative content analysis of Ria Ricis’s Bukan Buku Nikah Kasmantoni Kasmantoni; Vebbi Andra; Fahmy Burniawan
JPI: Jurnal Pustaka Indonesia Vol. 4 No. 1 (2024): April
Publisher : Yayasan Darussalam Bengkulu

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.62159/jpi.v5i3.345

Abstract

This study examines how personality is textually constructed in Ria Ricis’s Bukan Buku Nikah and how such construction organizes readers’ moral alignment and narrative engagement. Using a qualitative content analysis (QCA) of the full text, we defined the unit of analysis as discrete utterances or narrated actions that index a stable disposition, developed and iteratively refined a rule-governed codebook, and employed two trained coders who independently coded the corpus before adjudication; intercoder agreement was assessed with Krippendorff’s alpha (α), and an audit trail of codebook versions, memos, and decisions was maintained. Results identified 21 coded instances across eight personality aspects, with good and diligent/industrious each comprising 33% of observations (66% combined), while sympathetic accounted for 9% and five low-frequency categories helpful, dishonest, tenacious, jealous/possessive, and bad each appeared at 5%. Trait distributions clustered by character function: focal figures accumulated prosocial traits, whereas ambivalent cues surfaced briefly as plot catalysts without crystallizing into stable dispositions. These patterns indicate a choreographed “prosocial-effort” profile in which virtue is performed repeatedly in public-facing scenes to stabilize identification, and episodic ambivalence introduces tension that resolves toward didactic clarity. The study contributes a reliability-reported, replicable template for personality-focused literary analysis of Indonesian popular/hybrid prose and clarifies how moral didacticism is structurally distributed at the scene level. Educators can use scene-anchored excerpts to teach actionable social scripts of “performed virtue,” and researchers can align inductive trait maps with standardized personality frameworks and incorporate reader-response measures to test cross-text generalizability and reception effects.
Islamic values in contemporary Indonesian poetry: A qualitative content analysis of Yuslidar’s Suara Hati Seorang Ibu Pheni Hastuti; Heny Friantary; Vebbi Andra
JPI: Jurnal Pustaka Indonesia Vol. 4 No. 1 (2024): April
Publisher : Yayasan Darussalam Bengkulu

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.62159/jpi.v4i1.391

Abstract

This study examines how Islamic religious values are aesthetically articulated in Yuslidar’s poetry collection Suara Hati Seorang Ibu and how those articulations inform literary pedagogy in Indonesia. Using a qualitative content analysis with a deductive–inductive logic, we analyzed the entire volume and operationalized a codebook grounded in four macro categories monotheism (tawhid), ethical conduct (akhlak), doctrinal belief (aqidah), and Islamic jurisprudence (fiqh). Two analysts independently coded minimal textual “value instances” (word, line, couplet, stanza, paratext), resolved discrepancies through negotiated consensus, and maintained an audit trail of codebook versions and analytic memos. We identified 99 instances: tawhid 47 (47.5%; faith in God 36, taqwa 7, repentance 4), akhlak 44 (44.4%; sincerity 14, gratitude 9, patience 6, reliance on God 5, discipline 4, trust/responsibility 4, humility 2), aqidah 3 (3.0%; revealed matters), and fiqh 5 (5.1%; lawful 2, prohibited 3). The results reveal a devotional core faith operationalized ethically through sincerity and gratitude, with patience and reliance functioning as coping scripts under uncertainty; jurisprudential and doctrinal markers appear sparingly as boundary-setting closures that stabilize interpretation. These patterns converge with evidence that poetry supports character formation yet extend prior work by offering a single-author, frequency-based “value cartography” that surfaces how a maternal voice localizes virtues across domestic, civic, and pandemic-era scenes. The findings imply actionable designs for literature and Islamic-studies classrooms: structuring “value constellations” into close reading, dialogic inquiry, and reflective writing assessed with analytic rubrics, while future research should triangulate text analysis with classroom interventions and formal reliability metrics to evaluate effects on character and socio-emotional competencies.