Hikmatuna
Vol 7 No 2 (2021): Hikmatuna: Journal for Integrative Islamic Studies, December 2021

New Media and Women’s Da’wah Movement in the Post Covid-19 Era

Athik Hidayatul Ummah (Unknown)



Article Info

Publish Date
13 Dec 2021

Abstract

Internet and social media are sources of information and religious knowledge references, especially for millennials and middle-class urban communities. The transformation of Islamic da’wah mode from offline to online is still dominated by men preachers. Actually, women's da’wah movement can be found in new media platforms but they get less attention. This study aims to explore the role of women preachers in Islamic da’wah in the digital era. Second, to explore the digital da’wah strategy of the Islamic Gender Justice studies (Ngaji KGI) community. The research method used to analyze the problem above was a qualitative-research with an anthropological-da’wah approach. This paper shows that the role of female da’i is equal and their position is crucially the same as that of male da’i. In addition, Ngaji GKI strategy by adhering to relative advantage, compatibility, complexity, triability and observability makes its existence different from other communities.

Copyrights © 2021






Journal Info

Abbrev

hikmatuna

Publisher

Subject

Religion Humanities Economics, Econometrics & Finance Law, Crime, Criminology & Criminal Justice Social Sciences

Description

HIKMATUNA: Journal for Integrative Islamic Studies (ISSN Print: 2460-531X; Online: 2503-3042) is a peer-reviewed and open-access journal published biannually (June and December) by the Postgraduate Program Universitas Islam Negeri K.H. Abdurrahman Wahid Pekalongan, Indonesia. The journal welcomes ...