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Research Articles

Media discourse on Islamic women jihadists in Indonesia: Islamic radicalism post-Arab Spring

ORCID Icon, & ORCID Icon
Pages 4302-4317 | Received 20 Jun 2020, Accepted 16 Jan 2023, Published online: 30 Jan 2023
 

ABSTRACT

Following terrorist incidents involving women and increasing numbers of women joining and supporting the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS), the Indonesian media have highlighted this emerging trend and centered discourse around women’s roles in Islamic radicalism. This study examined Indonesian women jihadists and their perception and representation in the media, covering underlying causes and discourse surrounding women combatants, radical movements, and the meaning in which women and jihad are articulated within the socio-political context. Noting limited research within this emerging field, gender-specific jihad in Indonesia, this study analyzed discourse about women’s participation in jihadi movements during a resurgence in Islamic fundamentalism. Recent events have not only opened media space to present and represent gender jihad (the existence of radical women, women terrorist combatants, pledged of allegiance) but have also generated powerful media discourse reinforcing oppression of women, alienation, threat, and submissive ideas. Drawing on media portrayals and news production analysis, this study argued that women jihadists have not only received insufficient coverage from mainstream/commercial media, but that women/feminist perspectives have been silent, complicit, or nonexistent throughout incidences of terrorism involving women.

Acknowledgment

We would to acknowledge the author (s) supported to compile data for this article.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).

Notes

1. Marriage has become a critical institution to protect and expand the Islamic radical organization and its networks. Organizationally driven marriage arrangement is often used by Islamic radicals within violent movements in Southeast Asia, including Indonesia and Malaysia, as has been applied by Jamaah Islamiyah in Malaysia and Indonesia ((Citation2017),2–3).

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