Researchers
April 16, 2025 2026-02-04 9:56Researchers
Researchers Profile Japanese Studies
Aji Yudistira
Pernah mengajar sebagai dosen di Universitas Al azhar Indonesia, Universitas Bina Nusantara. Saat ini mengajar di bahasa Jepang di Lembaga Bahasa Internasional Universitas Indonesia, Vokasi UI, dan Universitas Satya Negara Indonesia. Minat penelitian saat ini berada pada bidang pop culture Jepang, terutama Anime, Manga dan Games.
Education:
Japanese Studies Magister
Aldrie Alman Drajat
Aldrie Alman Drajat is a lecturer at the Faculty of Humanities, Universitas Indonesia. His teaching and research interests encompass popular culture, community dynamics, migration, and gender and sexuality, examined through the lens of cultural studies.
Education :
Graduate School of Intercultural Studies Kobe University
Antonius R. Pujo Purnomo
Antonius R. Pujo Purnomo is an associate professor of Japanese Studies in the Faculty of Humanities Universitas Airlangga. He received his Ph. D. in Japanese intellectual history from Tohoku University Japan in 2017. Since 2019 to 2024 he is serves as the chairperson of the Indonesian Association for Japanese Literary Studies. His research focuses on Japanese literature during wartime and Japanese modern intellectuals. He has published several books and journal articles, such as Antologi Kesusastraan Anak Jepang (Anthology of Japanese Children Literature, 2010), Cerita Rakyat Jepang: Dari Hokkaido Sampai Okinawa (Japanese Folktales: From Hokkaido to Okinawa, 2019), Japanese Studies in Indonesia (New Frontiers in Japanese Studies, Routledge 2020) with Himawan Pratama, Nihon Gunseika no Media Honyaku ni okeru Indoneshia Chishikijin no Yakuwari from the book Ajia Yuugaku 286: Kindai Ajia no Bungaku to Honyaku (“The Role of Indonesian Intellectuals in Media Translations during Japanese Military Occupation” from the book “Literature and Translation in Modern Japan”, Bensei, 2023).
Education :
Tohoku University (Ph.D)
Ayu Azhariyah
Ayu Azhariyah is a lecturer in the Department of Japanese Literature at Universitas Hasanuddin, Indonesia, with academic interests in Japanese studies, anthropology of education, and Indonesia–Japan relations. She holds multiple academic degrees from Universitas Hasanuddin and pursued graduate studies at Nagoya University, where she is also undertaking her doctoral research. Her work explores history of Japanese language education, education in Indonesia, Japanology, and sociolinguistic phenomena.
Dewi Anggraeni
Dewi Anggraeni is an Assistant Professor in the Japanese Study Program at the Faculty of Humanities, Universitas Indonesia. She is also a literary critic focusing on postcolonial studies in both Japanese and Indonesian literature. She is now the Managing Editor of tengara.id, a literary criticism website founded by the Literary Committee, Jakarta Arts Council. She contributed to the queer speculative short story collection Parade yang Tak Pernah Usai (Buku Mojok, 2022), published an Indonesian literary criticism book Berayun di Antara Keberpihakan dan Autokritik (Anagram, 2023), and translated Ichikawa Saou’s debut novel Si Bengkok (Anagram, 2024). She actively writes for academic journals and sustainability reports and serves as a translator for Japanese and English.
Education :
Doctoral -- Hiroshima University (2016-2024)
Fesa Husnayovari
"Born and raised in South Jakarta, I am now navigating adulthood in Depok. Passionate about Japanese studies, social status studies, and urbanism, I analyze how culture, space, and hierarchy shape human experiences through a historical and sociological lens.
I earned my bachelor's degree in Japanese Studies from Universitas Indonesia, with a thesis on how Tokyo's urbanization during the era of rapid economic growth transformed its global image. In 2024, I was accepted into the LPDP scholarship program to pursue a master's degree in Japanese Area Studies at Universitas Indonesia."
Education :
Bachelor Degree, Japanese Studies, Universitas Indonesia, 2016
Fitriana Puspita Dewi
I am a lecturer in Japanese literature with a research focus on gender, culture, and transnational literary exchanges. My current work explores the experiences of Japanese women writers sent to Indonesia during the Japanese occupation, examining their perspectives, roles, and cultural impact.
Education:
Doctoral