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[ecrea] CFP - Special issue of Feminist Media Studies - Independent Women: From Film to Television
Mon Dec 18 09:21:04 GMT 2017
*CALL FOR PAPERS*
**
*Special Issue of /Feminist Media Studies /(**Vol. 19, No. 6, December
2019**)**
*
*Independent Women: From Film to Television*
Issue Guest Editors: Claire Perkins (Monash University) and Michele
Schreiber (Emory University)
**
Working in television has historically been considered ‘bread and
butter’ labour for female filmmakers around the world. For decades,
women have taken on roles in the production, writing and direction of
broadcast series as a way of supporting their ‘real’ and hard-won work
in feature filmmaking, with these television jobs rarely considered part
of their professional profile by themselves or others. Insofar as it
functions as paid employment but is not seen or valued at a symbolic or
material level in the same way as the development of a film, this type
of women’s television work functions as a form of invisible labour. And,
given that a large majority of female filmmakers work primarily in
spaces outside the global channels that are constructed and understood
as ‘mainstream’, this mode of labouring has been especially recognisable
in the career pathways of women broadly identified with independent
sectors of film production around the world.
As we move toward the end of the twenty-first century’s second decade,
though, this narrative is undergoing a critical transformation.
Radically displaced from the cultural and technological profile that it
developed during the twentieth century, television//is now regularly
valued as the preeminent screen art format of our age, with its once
defining distinction from cinema far less pronounced. At the same time,
a change in the profile of popular feminism in the contemporary era has
led to the reanimation of issues and discourses from earlier feminist
movements, such as systemic inequality, body politics and labour. And,
relatedly, the issue of gender equity in screen industries is in the
spotlight, with renewed calls for action from industry, government and
celebrity organisations leading to schemes that actively support women’s
creative leadership in television production.
In this environment, the work that female practitioners from the
independent sector undertake in and on television has taken on a wholly
different status and potential. In the Anglophone west, the critical
logic of ‘Peak TV’ is in large part founded upon a conception of the
current moment as a golden age for female-driven and female-focused
content. As a result, women such as Jane Campion (/Top of the Lake/),
Ava DuVernay (/Queen Sugar/), Lena Dunham (/Girls/) and Sharon Horgan
(/Catastrophe/) are now hailed as the visionary creators of their
celebrated series, and the historically negative role of the
director-for-hire has become a type of acclaimed cameo appearance for
the numerous women who labour on multiple or individual episodes of high
profile series, including Lisa Cholodenko (/Olive Kitteridge/, /The
Slap/), Andrea Arnold (/Transparent/, /I Love Dick/), So Yong Kim
(/Queen Sugar/) and Susanne Bier (/The Night Manager/).
Many questions arise as a result of this shift. For instance, have these
programs increased the presence of imperfect female characters, with
women valued for their unlikeability, anger, vulnerability and
precarity, rather than traditionally feminine characteristics? Has the
rise of digital platforms allowed women practitioners to exercise more
control and singularity of vision than has been historically offered in
traditional television production? How is the global conception of
independent production shifting along with these industry paradigms?
This special issue interrogates this shift in women’s television work
and how it is being understood and valued globally. It aims to cast a
transnational perspective on the migration of female practitioners from
film to television, exploring how the industrial, textual and critical
logic of independence moves across formats in different contexts. How is
the profile of women’s television work changing around the world as a
result of this migration, even if women still hold only a small
percentage of the share of creative roles overall? How does this
television work connect to the revitalisation of the category of
‘women’s filmmaking’ in academic screen studies and distinguished media
circuits over the past decade or so? How does the narrative of imperfect
womanhood operate outside the Anglophone west? And, ultimately, (how)
are these changes impacting upon the long-standing marginalisation of
women in screen production?
Topics for consideration by both scholars and practitioners include, but
are not limited to:
·the gender politics of television series driven by women from
independent film sectors around the world
·the transnational reach and reception of content identified with the
narrative of ‘Peak TV’ that is driven by women from the independent sector
·the historical and political significance of the invisible labour of
women from independent film sectors working in television
·the impact of transnational digital television platforms around the
world upon the kinds of feminisms that female filmmakers from the
independent sector can engage and generate, and the politics of
independence that surround these (conglomerate) platforms
·the strategies by which independent female filmmakers working in
television both promote and resist traditional auteur practices and
discourses
·the potential of the category of ‘Indie TV’ for female filmmakers and
contemporary television feminisms
·practitioner experience of moving from independent film to television
production
Please submit a 350-word abstract as well as a short (2-page) CV to
Michele Schreiber ((mjschre /at/ emory.edu)) <mailto:(mjschre /at/ emory.edu))>and
Claire Perkins ((claire.perkins /at/ monash.edu))
<mailto:(claire.perkins /at/ monash.edu))>by April 15, 2018. Authors whose
abstracts are selected will be notified by July 1, 2018 and asked to
submit complete manuscripts by December 15, 2018. Acceptance of the
abstract does not guarantee publication of the paper, which will be
subject to peer review.
**
*Aims and Scope *
Feminist Media Studies provides a transdisciplinary, transnational forum
for researchers pursuing feminist approaches to the field of media and
communication studies, with attention to the historical, philosophical,
cultural, social, political, and economic dimensions and analysis of
sites including print and electronic media, film and the arts, and new
media technologies. The journal invites contributions from feminist
researchers working across a range of disciplines and conceptual
perspectives.
Feminist Media Studies offers a unique intellectual space bringing
together scholars,
professionals and activists from around the world to engage with
feminist issues and debates in media and communication. Its editorial
board and contributors reflect a commitment to the facilitation of
international dialogue among researchers, through attention to local,
national and global contexts for critical and empirical feminist media
inquiry. When preparing your paper, please click on the link
‘Instructions for Authors’ on the Feminist Media Studies website
(www.tandf.co.uk/journals/rfms <http://www.tandf.co.uk/journals/rfms>)
which provides guidance on paper length, referencing style, etc. When
submitting your paper, please do not follow the link ‘Submit Online’ as
special issue papers are handled directly via email with the special
issue Editors.
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