Scotland’s for Me? The (gendered) salience of parental status and geographical location to experiences of working in film and television

Susan Berridge
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Abstract

In recent years, international scholarship and industry reports have exposed the inherent incompatibilities between the media sector’s working cultures and caring responsibilities, focusing particularly on women who remain disproportionately responsible for childcare. The ideal media worker—characterised by geographical mobility, autonomy, adaptability and total commitment to work—is highly at odds with the material realities of parents and carers. However, despite recognition of the salience of mobility to wider (gendered) patterns of exclusion of parents, there is little scholarship that critically scrutinises the significance of geographical location on their experiences of work. This article addresses this lack, contributing to wider debates around the need to promote equity, diversity and inclusion in the film and television workforce, which, in turn, is viewed as crucial to facilitating diverse representations, voices and perspectives on-screen. Using the Scottish screen sector as a case study, the article draws on a series of one-to-one interviews with parents – both men and women – who work, or have previously worked, in the film and television industries to explore the complex ways in which gender inequalities are mediated by both geographical location and caring responsibilities.
苏格兰属于我?父母身份和地理位置对影视工作经历的(性别)显著性
近年来,国际学术研究和行业报告揭示了媒体行业的工作文化与照顾孩子的责任之间存在内在的不相容,尤其关注女性在照顾孩子方面仍然承担着不成比例的责任。理想的媒体工作者——以地域流动性、自主性、适应性和对工作的完全投入为特征——与父母和照顾者的物质现实高度不一致。然而,尽管人们认识到流动性对更广泛的(性别)排斥父母模式的重要性,但很少有学术研究严格审查地理位置对他们工作经历的重要性。本文解决了这一不足,有助于围绕促进电影和电视工作人员公平、多样性和包容性的必要性展开更广泛的辩论,而这反过来又被视为促进银幕上多样化的表现、声音和观点的关键。本文以苏格兰电影行业为例,对在影视行业工作或曾经工作过的男女父母进行了一系列一对一的访谈,以探索地理位置和照顾责任介导性别不平等的复杂方式。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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