Consumption practices of women in the JN Surabaya taklim council

  • Dwi Retnani Srinarwati Universitas PGRI Adi Buana
Abstract views: 139 , PDF downloads: 150
Keywords: consumption practices, woman, jn surabaya, organisational communication

Abstract

Currently, in Indonesia, many religious institutions serve as a forum for women's empowerment, service, and advancement, in the form of educational institutions, Islamic boarding schools, Taklim Council, socio-religious organisations, and women's NGOs. All of them have a concern for improving women's standard of living. Therefore, the recitation is a religious institution deeply rooted in Islamic society, one of which is the JN Surabaya Taklim Council. This study aims to determine women's consumption practices in the JN Surabaya Taklim Council. The type of research chosen in this study is qualitative research with a form of qualitative descriptive research. In this study, the JN Surabaya recitation council members were research informants. The conclusion of this study shows that women's consumption practices in the Salafi Taklim Council are studied as objects or behaviours that appear, as values, and meanings, until they are continued as 'signs'. Consuming signs as a hyperreality and hyperreality occurs through a process preceded by simulacra, which becomes the simulation process's vehicle.

References

Alamgir, A., Ahmed, A., & Hasni, K. (2014). Islam, Muslim feminism and women's rights in Malaysia. European Journal of Social Sciences, 41(3), 430–437.
Alfisyah. (2017). Cultural Education and Value Formation in Banjarese Women (A Study on Women's Al-Qur'an Recitation Community in Martapura, Banjar Regency, South Kalimantan, Indonesia). 1st International Conference on Social Sciences Education-" Multicultural Transformation in Education, Social Sciences and Wetland Environment"(ICSSE 2017), 372–376.
Andara, S. (n.d.). Daftar Majelis Taklim Jawa Timur.
Assegaf, A. (2017). Gerakan Transnasional Islam dan Globalisasi Salafi di Islamic Center Bin Baz Yogyakarta. Millah, 16(02), 147–172.
Baudrillard, J. (1996). The System of Object. London dan New York: Verso.
Baudrillard, J. (2016). The consumer society: Myths and structures. Sage.
Brouwer, L. (2004). Dutch‐Muslims on the internet: a new discussion platform. Journal of Muslim Minority Affairs, 24(1), 47–55.
DeLong-Bas, N. (2010). Women, Islam, and the twenty-first century. Oxford Islamic Studies Online. Accessed Online September 28, 2010.
Denzin, N. K., & Lincoln, Y. S. (2011). The Sage Handbook of Qualitative Research (fourth Edi). SAGE Publications, Inc; Fourth edition (April 27, 2011).
El Guindi, F. (1999). Veil: Modesty, privacy and resistance. iUniverse.
Gani, K. (2015). 8 wajah kelas menengah. Gramedia Pustaka Utama.
Horikoshi, H. (1987). Kyai dan Perubahan Sosial. Jakarta: P3M.
Hary, B., Hayes, J., & Astren, F. (Eds.). (2021). Judaism and Islam: Boundaries, Communication and Interaction: Essays in Honor of William M. Brinner. Brill.
Huberman, A., Miles, M., & Saldana, J. (2014). Qualitative data analysis: A methods sourcebook. The United States of America: SAGE Publications.
Ikhsan, A. (2018). Ini Makna Cadar Hitam yang Jarang Diketahui, Ternyata Banyak Manfaatnya Lho. https://bogor.tribunnews.com/2018/05/22/ini-makna-cadar-hitam-yang-jarang-diketahui-ternyata-banyak-manfaatnya-lho
Jatim.bps.go.id. (2017). Jumlah Penduduk Menurut Kabupaten/Kota dan Agama yang Dianut di Provinsi Jawa Timur, 2016. https://jatim.bps.go.id/dynamictable/2017/10/09/120/jumlah-penduduk-menurut-kabupaten-kota-dan-agama-yang-dianut-di-provinsi-jawa-timur-2016
Kushendrawati, S. (2010). Masyarakat konsumen sebagai ciptaan kapitalisme global: Fenomena budaya dalam realitas sosial. Hubs-Asia, 10(1).
Lukens-Bull, R., & Woodward, M. (2021). Variation of Muslim Practice in Indonesia. In Handbook of Contemporary Islam and Muslim Lives (pp. 619-640). Cham: Springer International Publishing.
Marcotte, R. (2010). Gender and sexuality online on Australian Muslim forums. Contemporary Islam, 4(1), 117–138.
Miichi, K. (2019). Urban Sufi and politics in contemporary Indonesia: the role of dhikr associations in the anti-‘Ahok’rallies. South East Asia Research, 27(3), 225-237.
Miichi, K. (2020). Post‐islamism revisited: the response of indonesia’s prosperous justice party (pks) to gender‐related issues. The Muslim World, 110(4), 589-604.
Moleong, L. (2017). Metodologi penelitian kualitatif. Bandung: Remaja Rosdakarya.
Neuman, W. L. (2014). Social Research Methods: Qualitative and Quantitative Approaches. In Teaching Sociology (Vol. 30, Issue 3). https://doi.org/10.2307/3211488
Piliang, Y. (2010). Semiotika dan Hipersemiotika: Kode Gaya, dan Matinya Makna. Bandung: Matahari.
Piliang, Y. A. (2011). Dunia yang dilipat: Tamasya melampaui batas-batas kebudayaan. Matahari.
Sidani, Y. (2005). Women, work, and Islam in Arab societies. Women in Management Review, 20(7), 498–512.
Srinarwati, D. R., Pratiwi, P. S. E., & Arimbi, D. A. (2020). Simulacra in women’s majelis taklim based on Jean Baudrillard’s perspective. perspective, 4(3), 3.
Sukidi. (2001). Teologi Inklusif Cak Nur. Jakarta: Penerbit Buku Kompas.
Thohir, M. (2006). Orang Islam Jawa Pesisiran. Fasindo Press.
Turner, B. (2011). Religion and modern society: Citizenship, Secularisation and the state. Cambridge University Press.
Wardiani, S. (2019). Muslimah's Clothing Brand, Identity, and Myths in Barthes Semiotic Study. El Harakah, 21(1), 83.
Wiktorowicz, Q. (2006). Anatomy of the Salafi movement. Studies in Conflict & Terrorism, 29(3), 207–239.
Winn, P. (2012). Women's majelis taklim and gendered religious practice in northern Ambon. Intersections: Gender and Sexuality in Asia and the Pacific, 30, 1–15.
Zoest, A. (1993). Semiotika: tentang tanda, cara kerjanya dan apa yang kita lakukan dengannya. Jakarta: Yayasan Sumber Agung.
Published
2022-07-30
How to Cite
Srinarwati, D. R. (2022). Consumption practices of women in the JN Surabaya taklim council. Jurnal Studi Komunikasi, 6(2), 617-630. https://doi.org/10.25139/jsk.v6i2.4923
Section
Articles