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[Commlist] Cfp Doing Women's Film & Television History conference
Fri Oct 04 10:32:48 GMT 2019
There's one week left to submit proposals for the Doing Women's Film &
Television History conference. See further details below:
Doing Women’s Film and Television History V: Forming Histories/Histories
in Formation
20th-22nd May, 2020, Maynooth University, Maynooth, Co. Kildare, Ireland
Speakers include:
Kasandra O’Connell: Head of the Irish Film Archive at the Irish Film
Institute in Dublin City Centre. The Irish Film Archive holds a
collection that includes over one hundred years of Irish film as well as
other audiovisual material.
Kate Murphy (Bournemouth University) and Jeannine Baker (Macquarie
University) will speak about their collaboration with the BBC on the 100
Voices that Made the BBC: Pioneering Women which was launched in 2018
and features a curation of the contributions of women to BBC
broadcasting. See the project here:
https://www.bbc.com/historyofthebbc/100-voices/pioneering-women Annie
Doona, President of Institute of Art, Design and Technology and Chair of
Screen Ireland
Ruth Barton, Professor of Film Studies, Trinity College Dublin
Susan Liddy, co-chair of Women in Film & Television Ireland and lecturer
at University of Limerick
Anne O’Brien, lecturer at Maynooth University and author of Women,
Inequality and Media work (2019)
Abigail Keating, lecturer at University College Cork and co-founder of
Alphaville: Journal of Film and Screen Media
We'll also have a roundtable discussion about women in the film and
television industry.
The fifth biennial Doing Women’s Film & Television History conference
invites proposals from researchers and practitioners engaged in the
exploration, uncovering, archiving and dissemination of women’s roles in
film and television, as well as wider media, both in the past and today.
The theme of this conference - ‘Forming Histories/ Histories in
Formation’ – aims to foreground issues pertaining to the production,
curation and archiving of women’s histories in film and television as
well as the methods for, and approaches to, producing and shaping these
histories as they form. More particularly, much can be learned from the
diversity of practices, experiences and narratives of women’s film and
television history as they pertain to: national, transnational, world
and global histories; neglected, peripheral or hidden histories;
organisations such as museums, archives and universities; collectives,
groups and movements such as #MeToo; local communities and community
media; emergent forms and platforms; and historical approaches to
women’s reception of film and television as well as historicising
current practices and experiences of reception, fandom and consumption.
This three-day conference casts the net wide so that it can capture a
range of experiences, practices, industries, nationalities and voices
that are situated in relation to women and their histories. The
conference provides a platform for those working in and researching
film, television and media more generally as well as those invested in
the production of these histories and narratives of the past and as they
materialise. We invite papers that can provide added richness to the
theme of ‘Women in Film & Television,’ and are, in addition, especially
interested in the following areas:
International and comparative perspectives on women in film and television
Histories of women’s creative practice, production and technical work
and film/cinema and television work more generally in various national,
regional, or local contexts; transnational film and television;
migration and diasporas
Approaches to histories of women’s indigenous production, including
Third Cinema and grassroots film and television production
Representations of women in historical film and television
Female audiences, reception, fandom of film and television
Considerations of methodological and theoretical approaches to the study
of women in film and television and their audiences
Archival research methods and approaches including feminist archiving
practices
Use of recently established or historically neglected women’s media archives
Artefacts and ephemera in women’s archives: moving image, photographic
and digital media, scripts, merchandise, etc. Considerations of how
gender intersects with race, class, ethnicity, in relation to film and
television production, reception or representation
Revisiting production and labour through the lens of #MeToo and
#TimesUp, including historical formations of, and historicising, such
movements
Changing meanings of women and womanhood as reflected and shaped by the
interventions of women in film and television as producers, critics, and
campaigners.
Teaching women’s film and television history; feminist pedagogies; the
politics of education and training; women’s experiences of moving from
education to employment in film and television
We welcome papers on subjects outside of these areas and that enhance
the interpretations and meanings of ‘Doing Women’s Film & Television
History.’
Please submit proposals of 250 words along with the paper’s title and
a 50-word biography. Presentations should be no longer than 20 minutes,
including clips and images. We welcome pre-constituted panels of three
to four presenters (with panel title and abstract of 150 words),
proposals for roundtables or workshops and presentations from
researchers, practitioners, creatives and industry professionals.
Deadline for proposals Oct 11th 2019. Email: (dwfthv /at/ gmail.com)
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