“Open to all and everybody”? The Irish Film Board: accounting for the scarcity of women screenwriters |
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Authors: | Susan Liddy |
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Institution: | Department of Media and Communications, Mary Immaculate College, University of Limerick, Limerick, Ireland |
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Abstract: | Despite the many social and cultural changes that have occurred in Irish society since the Irish Film Board was re-established in 1993, the Irish film industry remains strongly male dominated. Specifically, Irish women constitute a minority of produced screenwriters and writer/directors. This article contributes to an understanding of the discursive resources that key decision makers in the Irish Film Board draw upon in order to talk about gender. A number of interpretative repertoires are used to rationalize its position in relation to the dearth of women screenwriters, four of which are examined here: evasion and deflection; gender neutrality; project-led funding; and a difficulty making sense of entrenched gender issues, articulated here as “I don’t know.” Within the respondents’ repertoires an ideological dilemma can be identified in the conceptualization of gender as both relevant and irrelevant. |
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Keywords: | Irish Film Board women screenwriters discourse analysis film funding |
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