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studikomunikasi@unitomo.ac.id
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INDONESIA
Jurnal Studi Komunikasi
ISSN : 25497294     EISSN : 25497626     DOI : -
Jurnal Studi Komunikasi (Indonesian Journal of Communications Studies), one of the journals published by Faculty of Communications Science Dr. Soetomo University, was established in January 2017. Jurnal Studi Komunikasi a double blind peer-reviewed journal, explores critical and constructive inquiries into a wide range of fields of study on Communication Science that include culture, religion, media, gender, public policy, development, environment, disaster, and tourism, with emphasis on interdisciplinary approaches: Communication Studies. It addresses issues with multi-perspectives view. Each volume of the journal discusses a specific theme based on “Call for Papers”, through which scholars, from diverse disciplines, are invited to contribute. Jurnal Studi Komunikasi published on March, July, and November.
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Articles 22 Documents
Search results for , issue "Vol. 9 No. 3 (2025)" : 22 Documents clear
Virtual communication experiences and identity role-playing in the Telegram account community Mutia Azzahro; Yuanita Setyastuti
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.v9i3.10964

Abstract

In today’s interconnected digital era, roleplay on social media platforms such as Telegram serves as a space for adolescents to create and perform virtual identities. This study explored the verbal and non-verbal communication experiences, meanings, and motivations underlying virtual identity formation among adolescent role-players. Employing a phenomenological qualitative approach, data were collected through semi-structured interviews (n = 5, June 2025), observation, and documentation. The findings reveal three interrelated themes: (1) verbal communication is primarily text-based due to anonymity constraints; (2) non-verbal communication is conveyed through textualised cues, such as ‘//’ symbols, emoticons, and stickers, which substitute for gestures and body language; and (3) virtual identity carries patterned meanings shaped by escapism, social experimentation, and self-exploration. Adolescents construct and perform identities that enable emotional expression, alternative self-exploration, and meaningful peer engagement. This study highlights how roleplay functions as a digital ‘third space’, where anonymity and textual communication facilitate identity development and socio-emotional literacies.
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.

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