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[ecrea] Registration Open: Women Creatives and TV Drama
Fri Aug 29 08:59:45 GMT 2014
apologies for cross-posting. Registration is now open for the following
event. This is a free event which will take place at Edge Hill
University. If you would like to attend, please email:
(elke.weissmann /at/ edgehill.ac.uk)
Re-imaging Regional Television Drama: Women as Agents of Cultural Change
Symposium, Edge Hill University with the University of Liverpool
11 September 2014
In recent years, female writers, producers and directors have emerged as
central innovators of television fictions. Dramas and dramadocs by Kay
Mellor, Sally Wainwright and Heidi Thomas belong to some of the
most-watched programmes on British screens, and they also celebrate
significant success across the pond and elsewhere. At the same time, new
production houses, such as Red Productions, contribute significantly to
the vibrancy of British (and international) television. In America, Ann
Biderman has taken the realist aesthetics of NYPD Blue to new extremes
in Southland and more recently Ray Donovan. And in Germany, Claudia
Matschulla has developed scripts focused on spaces that are embodied,
lived spaces rather than offering the touristic views of so many other
German television dramas. Many of these female
writers/producers/directors have ventured into new territories in terms
of representation such as the non-ageist depiction of a romance between
two widows in Last Tango in Halifax, substance abuse in response to
domestic violence in The Syndicate, or the friendship between a widower
and a young woman suffering from Downs Syndrome in Moving On.
Additionally, they connect these new representations to specific
conceptualisations of space and place, invariably making the most of
their regional locations. Unlike the first wave of regional drama in the
1960s and 70s, these women do not use regional space as ‘liminal ground
on which to criticize its own values, to challenge the “acceptable” way
of life with other attitudes’ (Newcombe 1979: 158). Rather, they imagine
these spaces as mundane, lived space, and thereby imagine an embodied
experience of regional identity that has its own rich patterns of speech
and everyday life. This crucially impacts on the conceptualisation of
the regions as touristic spaces (Blandford 2005), redefining them not
only as places with their own histories, cultures and identities where
life is lived in and through local identities but as new centres of
creative and cultural production that are situating these identities
centre stage in national life.
Keynote speakers:
Vicky Ball, DeMonfort University, Leicester
Julia Hallam, University of Liverpool
Ruth McElroy, University of South Wales
Specialist Panel about the Place of Women Creatives in Scotland with
Emma Lennox (freelance writer)
Dhivya Chetty (Development Producer for Hopscotch, freelance)
Further speakers:
Lez Cooke, Royal Holloway, University of London
Jill Marshall, Queen Margaret University, Edinburgh
Kim Wiltshire, screenwriter and lecturer, Edge Hill University)
Veronica Ali, independent writer
The symposium seeks to address what makes these creative women and their
dramas so popular and successful. Questions that we are interested to
address include:
* How do dramas and dramadocs written, produced or directed by women
re-imagine regional spaces and identities?
* How do they engage ideas of gender and gendered representations?
* In what ways are these productions developing new ground in terms of
gender, genre and regional identities?
* What are the working practices for/of these female creatives?
* Are contemporary industrial conditions facilitating the development of
new regional voices?
* How have in the past women writers, producers and directors used
television drama as a means to express issues of representation and change?
The organisers are seeking to develop an edited collection from the
symposium and have been approached by publishers already.
This symposium will be hosted by Edge Hill University and the University
of Liverpool.
Conference organisers: Elke Weissmann and Julia Hallam
Sponsored by:
ECREA Television Studies Section and the Institute for Creative
Enterprise (ICE) at Edge Hill University.
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