As the only
female director to win the Palme d’Or, and the second to be nominated for an
Academy Award (both for The Piano [1993]) which is celebrating its 25th
anniversary, Jane Campion is a figure who garners both critical and popular
acclaim, as well as industry-wide respect. With over thirty years standing as a
film, and now television, director (with Top of the Lake attracting
collaborations with critically acclaimed actresses such as Elizabeth Moss,
Holly Hunter, and Nicole Kidman), Campion’s work shines a spotlight on gender
roles, often through complex female characters and an innovative approach to
the screen representation of women habitually at the edges of society. As such,
Campion’s name is synonymous with women on screen. Indeed, Campion is also
vocal about the under-representation of females in the film industry more
generally, concluding that, as ‘women are going to tell different stories –
there would be many more stories in the world if women were making more films’
(Pulver, A. The Guardian, 14th May, 2014).
However,
her commitment to the place of feminism itself is tempered by an ambivalence
towards the term. Indeed, Campion has stated that ‘I no longer know what this
[feminism, in the context of her filmmaking] means or expresses...I am interested
in life as a whole. Even if my representation of female characters has a
feminist structure, this is nevertheless only one aspect of my approach’
(Wright-Wrexham, 1999). The body of scholarship on her work to date is
testament to her celebrated position within film, producing an eclectic and
wide-ranging mix of responses extending to biography, nation and identity,
adaptation, sex and eroticism, as well as authorship in her work. All these
contributions celebrate the multiplicity in, and breadth of, her art and her
vision.
Thus the collection aims to interrogate, contribute to, and extend
contemporary scholarship on Campion by bringing together new and innovative
analyses from emerging and established scholars in the field. here will, then,
be a shared focus on the legacy and contribution made by Campion to films made
by, for, and about women, as well as Campion’s filmmaking (vision and practice)
and engagement with (or ambivalence to) feminist theory past and present,
providing new and exciting approaches for understanding Campion’s work.
We seek
contributions that engage with Campion’s work in film, television, and/or the
film and television industry more generally, and which consider (and
potentially re-evaluate) her contributions and position vis-à-vis feminism and
feminist discourse, as well as our understanding of representations of women
and/or gender in the twentieth and twenty-first century.
The edited
collection will be aimed at Edinburgh University Press’s ReFocus series,
examining overlooked international film directors. Series editors are Robert
Singer, PhD (NYC) and Gary D. Rhodes, PhD (Belfast, N.I.).
Possible
topics could include but are by no means limited to:
- Analysis of individual films (including shorts) and/or television
- Female Authorship
- Campion and women’s cinema
- Men, Masculinity and relationships in the work of Campion
- Genre and experimentation in Campion
- Campion and collaboration (with other directors/actors/writers)
- Campion and adaptation (as feminist practice)
- Feminist ethics, politics and aesthetics in Campion’s work
- Problematising feminism
- Sex, sexuality, and the erotic
- The female gaze
- Language, selfhood, subjectivity and agency
- Motherhood
- Generational feminisms
- Film, feminism and philosophy in Campion’s work
- French feminist critical readings of Campion
- Nation and/or institution, identity and subjectivity
- Industry, indie, Hollywood and the festival circuit/prizes
- Trauma, loss, and grief
- Campion, feminism and film philosophy
- Comparisons between feminist filmmakers’ work Campion
If you have
any questions regarding the suitability of possible topics and material for
inclu-sion in the volume, please do not hesitate to contact the editors, Dr Alexia L. Bowler (a.bowler@swansea.ac.uk) & Dr Adele Jones at
(adele.m.jones@swansea.ac.uk).
Abstracts
of 350 words, for chapters of between 7,000-8,000 words including endnotes
(referenced in Chicago style), along with a short biographical note, should be
emailed to both editors by 31st January, 2019. Successful proposals will be
notified by 1st March, 2019. Chapters will be expected, in full, by 30th June,
2019.
Eds: Dr Alexia L. Bowler and Dr Adele Jones (Swansea University)
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