Kartini and Srikandi: Representation of Women in Indonesian Political Discourse through Metonymy

The representation of women in politics is one of the most discussed topics in Indonesian political discourse, including political discourse in media, particularly in the Indonesian context. Two metonymies are commonly used to refer to women politicians in the Indonesian context, the first is Srikan...

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Main Authors: Muhammad Adam, Siti Hafsah, Wahyuni Wahyuni
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Prodi Sastra Inggris Fakultas Sastra Universitas Sanata Dharma 2021-03-01
Series:Journal of Language and Literature
Subjects:
Online Access:https://e-journal.usd.ac.id/index.php/JOLL/article/view/3000
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spelling doaj-88ffed0c07d24a06bb8e40a965e0d7012021-03-29T04:34:45ZengProdi Sastra Inggris Fakultas Sastra Universitas Sanata DharmaJournal of Language and Literature1410-56912580-58782021-03-0121114815910.24071/joll.v21i1.30001912Kartini and Srikandi: Representation of Women in Indonesian Political Discourse through MetonymyMuhammad Adam0Siti Hafsah1Wahyuni Wahyuni2Universitas BalikpapanUniversitas BalikpapanUniversitas BalikpapanThe representation of women in politics is one of the most discussed topics in Indonesian political discourse, including political discourse in media, particularly in the Indonesian context. Two metonymies are commonly used to refer to women politicians in the Indonesian context, the first is Srikandi and the second is Kartini, both are well-known figures in Indonesian history and culture. This paper discusses the use of those two metonymies to speak about women politicians in Indonesian political discourse. The focus of the investigation is the extent of the use of the metonymy across political parties and Indonesian political level, from national to local, and the influence of the context of time to the metonymy chosen in a particular discourse. The study will also examine the characteristics that are associated with the two figures that are highlighted in metonymic use.  The study is descriptive qualitative with Conceptual Metaphor Theory – CMT as the theoretical background with ten data from news headlines that are purposively chosen for this study. The result shows that the metonymic use of both figures is extensive across parties and political levels. It is also found that the context plays important role in the use of Kartini particularly during the celebration of Kartini day on April 21; Whereas the notions of women empowerment are not reflected from all metonymic use. Thus, the text producers should not only use Kartini and Srikandi as metonymy just because of gender relatedness but should reflect more on women empowerment.https://e-journal.usd.ac.id/index.php/JOLL/article/view/3000metonymypolitical discoursesrikandi and kartiniwomen in politics.
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Muhammad Adam
Siti Hafsah
Wahyuni Wahyuni
spellingShingle Muhammad Adam
Siti Hafsah
Wahyuni Wahyuni
Kartini and Srikandi: Representation of Women in Indonesian Political Discourse through Metonymy
Journal of Language and Literature
metonymy
political discourse
srikandi and kartini
women in politics.
author_facet Muhammad Adam
Siti Hafsah
Wahyuni Wahyuni
author_sort Muhammad Adam
title Kartini and Srikandi: Representation of Women in Indonesian Political Discourse through Metonymy
title_short Kartini and Srikandi: Representation of Women in Indonesian Political Discourse through Metonymy
title_full Kartini and Srikandi: Representation of Women in Indonesian Political Discourse through Metonymy
title_fullStr Kartini and Srikandi: Representation of Women in Indonesian Political Discourse through Metonymy
title_full_unstemmed Kartini and Srikandi: Representation of Women in Indonesian Political Discourse through Metonymy
title_sort kartini and srikandi: representation of women in indonesian political discourse through metonymy
publisher Prodi Sastra Inggris Fakultas Sastra Universitas Sanata Dharma
series Journal of Language and Literature
issn 1410-5691
2580-5878
publishDate 2021-03-01
description The representation of women in politics is one of the most discussed topics in Indonesian political discourse, including political discourse in media, particularly in the Indonesian context. Two metonymies are commonly used to refer to women politicians in the Indonesian context, the first is Srikandi and the second is Kartini, both are well-known figures in Indonesian history and culture. This paper discusses the use of those two metonymies to speak about women politicians in Indonesian political discourse. The focus of the investigation is the extent of the use of the metonymy across political parties and Indonesian political level, from national to local, and the influence of the context of time to the metonymy chosen in a particular discourse. The study will also examine the characteristics that are associated with the two figures that are highlighted in metonymic use.  The study is descriptive qualitative with Conceptual Metaphor Theory – CMT as the theoretical background with ten data from news headlines that are purposively chosen for this study. The result shows that the metonymic use of both figures is extensive across parties and political levels. It is also found that the context plays important role in the use of Kartini particularly during the celebration of Kartini day on April 21; Whereas the notions of women empowerment are not reflected from all metonymic use. Thus, the text producers should not only use Kartini and Srikandi as metonymy just because of gender relatedness but should reflect more on women empowerment.
topic metonymy
political discourse
srikandi and kartini
women in politics.
url https://e-journal.usd.ac.id/index.php/JOLL/article/view/3000
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