Fitri Hariana Oktaviani, Bernard McKenna, Terrance Fitzsimmons
This study examines the contested biopolitical demands placed on women leaders in Indonesia as they discipline their bodies to inhabit “professionalism.” Moving beyond simple organizational dress codes, we apply Foucault's concept of the dispositive to analyze how professional norms emerge at the volatile intersection of cultural, religious, state, and global discourses. Using a feminist interpretation of Foucauldian discourse analysis, we analyze interviews and observations of women leaders across public and private organizations. The findings reveal that a “professional” body in this context is not a neutral esthetic but a multilayered biopolitical battlefield of respectability, piety, and marketability. By historicizing the biopolitical dispositive, the study offers a new transnational framework for understanding how women navigate layered regulatory formations through the selective incorporation of religious piety, state endorsed ideology, and neoliberal marketability. © 2026 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.
Universitas Brawijaya, Malang, Indonesia; The University of Queensland, Brisbane, QLD, Australia