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[Commlist] CFP - Women Filmmakers: Genre and Gender in French, British and US Cinema and TV Series
Tue Sep 03 10:39:50 GMT 2024
*Women Filmmakers: Genre and Gender in French, British and US Cinema and
TV Series*
3-4 July 2025
University of Le Mans, France
In the introduction to /Gender Meets Genre in Postwar Cinemas/ (2012),
Christine Gledhill argued that genre and gender rarely intersect as
concepts in film studies, even though both terms are governed by “bodies
of conventions [and] rules of inclusion and exclusion” (2). Since then,
such intersections have gained greater scholarly attention, marked by an
increased proliferation of publications delving into women’s authorship
in the context of genre film. This conference aims to further this
investigation through an examination of women filmmakers’ engagement
with genre and gender expectations. With a particular focus on
transnational and comparative approaches across US, British, and French
filmmaking, we propose to explore how women directors grapple with the
intertwined notions of genre and gender.
Already in the 1980s, Teresa de Lauretis noted that the elaboration of
film genres and techniques plays a crucial role in shaping gendered
subjectivities and identities. When developing her argument that cinema
belongs to the “technologies of gender” that produce “cultural
conceptions of male and female” (1984, 5), she evoked the power of film
genres to inscribe gender difference in narrative and visual
conventions, emphasizing the need to disrupt the “masculine-feminine
polarity” (82) to allow for new subjectivities. How can cinema resist
the power of genre to determine gender according to hegemonic and
heterosexual norms? In what ways do female filmmakers bend the codes
that have prevailed in male-dominated Hollywood? How does women’s work
within genres not only undo or subvert these popular formats, but also
draw on their generative potential?
This conference aims to shed light on the intertwined notions of genre
and gender through the prism of women’s cinema to examine whether it is
possible to challenge or rewrite the highly conventionalized generic
worlds of Hollywood cinema. Traditionally, feminist examinations of
films made by women privileged experimental or art-house cinema, owing
in part to the assumed co-implication between genres and reinforcement
of gender stereotypes, as well as ideologically problematic
(mis)representations. This resulted in conceptualizations of women’s
filmmaking as “counter-cinema” that resisted the power of the gaze
(Mulvey 1975), conceived as a direct challenge to Hollywood’s
conventions and, more broadly, to popular genre film. Meanwhile, Claire
Johnston’s (1972) model of “counter-cinema”, based not on the language
of negation but “infiltration”, that is, challenging the hegemonic norms
from within, opened path to examine women directors working within
studio-era Hollywood genre films, such as those by Dorothy Arzner and
Ida Lupino. As Patricia White observes, in contrast to Mulvey’s embrace
of “the destruction of pleasure as a radical weapon”, Johnston’s work
anticipates a current postfeminist climate of the 21st century, which is
“much less suspicious of pleasure than was the cultural feminism of the
early 1970s” (2015, 9). It also redirects scholarly attention towards
the development of feminist discourse within generic conventions, in
line with the postmodernist concern with appropriations, remakes, and
rewriting. The awareness of genericity – the ability of a film to
mobilize one or several genres (Schaeffer 1989) – prompts female
directors to employ pastiche and metafiction as tools of generic
remaking. Mary Harrod calls attention to such self-reflexive techniques
used by women filmmakers in “heightened genre films” – a phrase that she
uses to analyze their participation in the construction of genericity as
a powerful aesthetic and affective experience. Based on a corpus of
post-1990s US films made by Kathryn Bigelow, Amy Heckerling, Sofia
Coppola, Kimberly Peirce, Greta Gerwig, among others, her book examines
the notion of “cine-/fille/”: the female director as an
/auteur/ exploiting cinephilic intertextuality to fashion her own
artistic vision. A growing interest in female directors working within
popular formats is also attested to by a recent wave of publications on
“disreputable” genres, including horror film: Alison Peirse’s /Women
Make Horror: Filmmaking, Feminism, Genre/ and Patricia Pisters’s /New
Blood in Contemporary Cinema: Women Directors and The Poetics of
Horror/, both published in 2020, and Barbara Creed’s /Return of the
Monstrous-Feminine: Feminist New Wave Cinema/ (2022).
We are interested in approaches that consider women’s filmmaking within
a broad spectrum of genres and diverse production contexts, from the
so-called mainstream cinema to films made on the outskirts of Hollywood.
Our project extends the growing body of work on women’s genre authorship
in US-American and British contexts to include French women filmmakers
as well, who have significantly contributed to the culturally impactful
realm of genre cinema. Investigating how genres meet gender in women’s
film practice is pressing, given the increased cultural visibility of
genre films authored by women and the critical implications of their
embracement of forms historically categorized as “male”, such as war
films, Westerns or horror cinema. For instance, Kelly Reichardt’s
/Meek’s Cutoff /(2010) offers a compelling take on the Western by
filming the experience of the Frontier from the perspective of women
whose voices are relegated to whispers in the face of decision-making
husband. In /American Honey/ (2016), Andrea Arnolds departs from her
earlier focus on the impoverished British housing estates to rewrite the
genre of the road movie in the post-recession US context, while in /You
Were Never Really Here /(2017) Lynne Ramsay turns to /noir /to
interrogate violent masculinity, addressing a war-related trauma and
child sex trafficking. In France, Julia Ducournau makes history by
becoming the second female filmmaker after Jane Campion (with /The
Piano/ in 1993) to win the Palme d’Or with /Titane /(2021), a refreshing
revision of the body horror which unpacks, in a queer gesture, gender
and sexual identities, while opening up the notion of kinship beyond
heteronormativity. It is equally important to examine how women
filmmakers undercut the scopic drive by means of transforming the visual
language of genres conventionally associated with femininity, such as
the heritage costume drama, romantic comedy or female biopics. Sofia
Coppola’s latest biopic /Priscilla /(2023) allows Elvis Presley’s young
wife to grow into a woman who discovers her own desires after seeing
herself through the King’s eyes. While the camera continuously returns
to protagonist’s body to represent her “looked-at-ness” and the desire
it inspires, Coppola uses the close-up not to objectify her subject but
to arouse a phenomenological experience which defines the treatment of
femininity in her cinema. Céline Sciamma’s engagement with teenpics in
/Water Lilies /(2007), /Tomboy/ (2011) and /Girlhood /(2014), and her
critically-acclaimed costume drama /Portrait of a Lady on Fire /(2019),
provide yet another instance of rewriting of the traditionally
female-orientated forms. Other films might bend the genres to undercut
the pleasure related to narrative and chronological order, visual and
aural complementarity, actors/actresses and expected characterizations.
Possible avenues of research include but are not limited to:
* Female genre auteurs: what are ther new paradigms of female
authorship within genre filmmaking?
* Comparative approaches: how do male and female filmmakers employ
genre, including genres that have historically been associated with
male viewing pleasures (the Western, horror cinema or the war film,
among others)?
* How do women filmmakers making genre films engage with feminist
topics or themes assumed to belong to femininity?
* Emergent gender and intersectional identities in films by women
* Pastiche, self-referentiality and meta-genericity in women’s filmmaking
* Critical reviews and their impact on the trajectory of film genres:
does a close examination of critical literature reveal any
favorable/negative biases as regards women’s genre cinema?
* Genre, gender and film sound: how do music and sound participate in
the technologies of gender and the construction of genre in women’s
cinema?
* The #MeToo movement has brought visibility to sexual harassment in
patriarchal society: how have women filmmakers used genres to
respond to this cultural moment?
Please send your abstract (about 250 words) and a short biography to the
conference website https://femme.sciencesconf.org/
<https://femme.sciencesconf.org/>by *31 October 2024*. You will need to
create an account before submitting your proposal.
Contact: (Delphine.Letort /at/ univ-lemans.fr)
<mailto:(Delphine.Letort /at/ univ-lemans.fr)>
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