Zulfa Sakhiyya, Christianti Tri Hapsari, Sri Sumaryani, Alief Noor Farida
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From protest march to digital campaign: women’s movement and critical literacies in Indonesia
ABSTRACT By employing a Critical Discourse Analysis (CDA), this paper examines the issues of women’s movement and empowerment by exploring the literacy practices of feminist activists. The narratives of literacy and its impact on women’s empowerment have been dominated by economic approaches. Freire’s notion of consciousness-raising has provided insight into the importance of women’s agency and their ideological struggle in fighting patriarchal ideologies through critical literacy practices. By taking the case of Women’s March Serang (WMS), we explore alternative stories of critical literacies and women’s empowerment and argue that critical literacies serve as a valuable mediating tool by which the women’s movement group could both transform themselves and engage in wider social activism. More specifically, WMS employs critical literacies to advocate gender equality and social inclusion in order to mobilize resources in a relatively patriarchal culture. From marching on the street to digital campaigns in social media, WMS has challenged the dominant discourse of functional literacy and women’s empowerment and demonstrated the adaptability of critical literacy practices in ongoing ways to support social activism and advocacy.
期刊介绍:
Gender and Education grew out of feminist politics and a social justice agenda and is committed to developing multi-disciplinary and critical discussions of gender and education. The journal is particularly interested in the place of gender in relation to other key differences and seeks to further feminist knowledge, philosophies, theory, action and debate. The Editors are actively committed to making the journal an interactive platform that includes global perspectives on education, gender and culture. Submissions to the journal should examine and theorize the interrelated experiences of gendered subjects including women, girls, men, boys, and gender-diverse individuals. Papers should consider how gender shapes and is shaped by other social, cultural, discursive, affective and material dimensions of difference. Gender and Education expects articles to engage in feminist debate, to draw upon a range of theoretical frameworks and to go beyond simple descriptions. Education is interpreted in a broad sense to cover both formal and informal aspects, including pre-school, primary, and secondary education; families and youth cultures inside and outside schools; adult, community, further and higher education; vocational education and training; media education; and parental education.