CALL
FOR PAPERS: The Female Detective on TV
MAI: Feminism & Visual Culture (maifeminism.com) invites
academic authors with expertise in television studies and other related
disciplines to contribute to our upcoming special issue on female detectives on
TV.
For decades now, the female detective has occupied
space within a genre that has been all-too-often reserved for the celebratory
storylines of self-sacrificial men. She has served to break down sexist
barriers placed before women within professional and personal frameworks,
acting as an on-screen surrogate and inspiration for (female) spectators. The
popularity of female-led TV crime drama across the world points to her success
in captivating widespread audience attention.
The topic of
women in TV crime drama has inspired a range of significant feminist
scholarship (see for example, Pinedo 2019; Coulthard, Horeck, Klinger, McHugh
2018; Greer 2017; Buonanno 2017; Moorti and Cuklanz 2017; Steenberg 2017, 2012;
Jermyn 2017; Weissman (2016; 2010; 2007); McCabe 2015; Turnbull 2014; Brunsdon
2013; D’Acci 1994). This work has examined female-led TV crime drama from a
variety of angles, including transnational cultural exchanges and currencies,
serial form and narrative, gender, class, sexual and racial politics, and
postfeminist identities and logics.
Certain series such as The Killing (Denmark
2007-2012, US 2011-2014), The Bridge (Sweden 2011-2018, US 2013-2014),
The Fall (UK 2013-2016), and Top of the Lake (NZ/Australia
2013/2017), have been singled out for how their female protagonists
(Sarah Lund/Sarah Linden; Saga Noren; Stella Gibson, and Robin Griffin)
resonate with viewers across transnational borders. Meanwhile, on primetime
episodic US TV crime drama, Mariska Hargitay’s 21-year stint as Olivia Benson
on Law & Order: Special Victims Unit (US 1999-present) – the longest
running live-action TV series in American history – has turned her into a
‘touchstone figure’ (Moorti and Cuklanz 2017). Hargitay’s real-life activism,
and her dedication to fighting sexual violence against women, has attained
important cultural recognition, as Law & Order: SVU itself has
received renewed critical consideration in the wake of the #MeToo
movement.
Notably, though, the female detectives mentioned in
the above paragraph are overwhelmingly white. What shifts occur in the genre
when a non-white female actor helms the main role as detective? What new
possibilities, for example, are opened up by the emergence of black female
legal investigators and detectives on network series such as ABC’s How to
Get Away with Murder (US 2014-2019) and online TV series such as Netflix’s Seven
Seconds (US 2018)? And to what extent is TV crime drama able to
meaningfully engage with issues of intersectionality and the precariousness of
social justice in twenty-first century society?
This special issue seeks to build on the existing body
of feminist writing on women in TV crime drama, through a further investigation
of the figure of the female detective at this critical juncture for feminist
television studies. What new feminist visions of the female detective
have emerged with changes in industrial practices and the growth of online
streaming and niche television? How does the female detective of streaming TV
compare to the images of the female detective found in the middlebrow crime
dramas of linear TV? In an era of networked media in which popular feminism and
popular misogyny (Banet-Weiser 2018) are more intertwined than ever before,
what notions of empowerment are articulated through the figure of the female
detective? To what extent does the female detective enable an exploration of central
issues regarding female subjectivity and political resistance against systemic
forms of violence?
We hope to open further debate on the subject of the
female detective in all her guises. Staying true to MAI spirit, we are seeking
papers written from intersectional and multivalent feminist perspectives. We
hope this issue not only examines the figures and representations of women
crime investigators on the screen, but also situates their work in related
social, cultural and political contexts.
Our definition of the female detective is broad and
inclusive. She can, but doesn't have to be a private eye or a police
professional, just as long as she pursues social justice or truth.
While analyses of current and recent examples seem to
be an obvious priority as far as contribution to the field knowledge of visual
culture analysis, we also welcome papers on female detectives from the
past.
In particular, we would like to encourage
authors to consider submitting articles on the following titles:
Seven Seconds
How to Get Away with Murder
Marcella
Spiral
Unbelievable
Killing Eve
Safe
Top of the Lake
The Fall
The Bridge
Veronica Mars
Southland
Fargo
Prime Suspect
La Mante
Castle
|
The Killing
Broadchurch
Lucifer
Elementary
The Wire
The Closer
Happy Valley
Jessica Jones
Absentia
Tatort
The Bletchley Circle
Collateral
Suspects
Witnesses
Loch Ness
Cagney and Lacey
|
We
recognise that there are many more titles of interests, and the list could run
quite long. If you wish to propose a paper on any other TV title, please get in
touch with the editors to discuss your suggestion: contact@maifeminism.com
We
plan to publish this issue in the first half of 2021.
The
editorial team includes:
Tanya
Horeck (Anglia Ruskin University, UK)
Jessica
Ford (University of Newcastle, Australia)
Anna
Backman Rogers (University of Gothenburg, Sweden)
Anna
Misiak (Falmouth University, UK)
300-word
Abstracts due: 30 May 2020
4000-6000
word Full Papers due: 1 December 2020
Please
consult the MAI submission guidelines before submitting: https://maifeminism.com/submissions/
Dr Anna
Misiak
MA Film & Television Course Leader
MA Film & Television Course Leader
School of
Film and TV
Falmouth University
United Kingdom
Tel: 0132637057
https://www.falmouth.ac.uk/content/dr-anna-misiak
http://womenundercommunism.com/author/
@AnnaMisiakFal
---
Founding Editor/Editor-in-Chief
MAI: Feminism & Visual Culture
https://maifeminism.com/
@MAI_JOURNAL
Falmouth University
United Kingdom
Tel: 0132637057
https://www.falmouth.ac.uk/content/dr-anna-misiak
http://womenundercommunism.com/author/
@AnnaMisiakFal
---
Founding Editor/Editor-in-Chief
MAI: Feminism & Visual Culture
https://maifeminism.com/
@MAI_JOURNAL
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