Danish mothers on-screen / Djuna Hallsworth.
2021
PN1995.9.M63 H35 2021
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Title
Danish mothers on-screen / Djuna Hallsworth.
Author
ISBN
9783030885793 (electronic bk.)
3030885798 (electronic bk.)
9783030885786 (hardcover)
303088578X (hardcover)
3030885798 (electronic bk.)
9783030885786 (hardcover)
303088578X (hardcover)
Published
Cham, Switzerland : Palgrave Macmillan, 2021.
Language
English
Description
1 online resource
Item Number
10.1007/978-3-030-88579-3 doi
Call Number
PN1995.9.M63 H35 2021
Dewey Decimal Classification
791.43/6525209489
Summary
This brilliant book brings a fresh and original perspective to the already voluminous literature on Scandinavian screen fiction. By combining social and cultural policy analysis with content analysis, Hallsworth sheds new light on how state-supported narratives stereotype women. Its focus on absent, ashamed and transgressive mother characters across genres moves beyond the traditional focus on Scandinavian progressiveness, asking critical questions about identity and belonging in world-renowned welfare states. - Professor Trine Syvertsen, IMK, University of Oslo This book examines Danish mother characters in contemporary films and television dramas, revealing representational trends that have, thus far, been overlooked in scholarly criticism on the small nations screen fiction. Despite the socially and politically progressive context from which these narratives have emerged, there is a tendency for on-screen mothers to experience guilt, shame and social isolation. The political narrative of gender equality, democracy and universal social support that permeates Danish state policy is undermined in screen fiction, where working mothers are problematised and the welfare systems integrity is challenged. Combining case studies of En Krlighedshistorie (2001), Nymphomaniac (2014), Anna Pihl (2006-2008), Forbrydelsen (2007-2012), Borgen (2010-present) and Arvingerne (2014-2017) with the analysis of policy documents and interviews with industry professionals, this book demonstrates how narrative media functions as a highly political site of contestation over who has the right to participate in civil society. Dr Djuna V. Hallsworth has a PhD in Gender and Cultural Studies from the University of Sydney. She has taught on cultural policy, sociology, media studies and gender and sexuality at Sydney University and Macquarie University. She is also the author of the article 'National broadcasting, international audiences' and a book chapter entitled 'Making visible the incomprehensible' about mental illness in television drama.
Bibliography, etc. Note
Includes bibliographical references and index.
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Series
Palgrave studies in (re)presenting gender.
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Table of Contents
Chapter 1. Introduction: Narratives of Danish culture in fiction and policyChapter 2. Gender and motherhood in Danish social policyChapter 3. Policy in practice: film, television and cultural policyChapter 4. Motherhood, sexuality and shame in Danish cinemaChapter 5. Crime dramas and the working mother's sacrificeChapter 6. Powerful women and forgotten mothers in Danish public service dramaChapter 7. Conclusion
Manifesting 'good people' through fiction.
Manifesting 'good people' through fiction.