ABSTRACT
Women Filmmakers and the Welfare State compares conditions for diverse women filmmakers in relation to cultural movements, politics, and welfare state policy during the long 1970s.
The book examines the expansion of women’s filmmaking and transnational collaboration across a range of genres, styles, and forms, foregrounding that film practices of the time were highly varied, ranging from women’s political and “consciousness-raising” films to fiction, art cinema, animation, documentary, experimental, and educational cinema. Welfare states such as Canada and Sweden had related, but different approaches to public support for filmmaking by women, which also influenced Indigenous, queer, and migrant and immigrant access to film production. At the height of second-wave feminism, this expansion took root through transnational collaboration as well as collectives, co-ops, activist networks, film festivals, public television, and government organizations, including in relation to environmentalist, pacifist, and UN Year and Decade of the Woman initiatives. The book includes interviews with filmmakers and also explores the current state of access, circulation, and archival practice.
This book is aimed at a scholarly audience with applicability for undergraduate and graduate students, as well as for adoption across a variety of cinema, media, gender, political science, cultural policy, transnationalism, and gender and women’s studies courses.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
part I|36 pages
Art Cinema and the Woman Auteur
chapter 3|22 pages
When Gender Talks
part II|45 pages
Constructing the Welfare State Child and Educational Media
chapter 5|17 pages
The Filmmaker as Useful Social Animator
part III|37 pages
Geopolitics, Gender, and the Public Sphere
chapter 8|19 pages
Geopolitics, the Welfare State, and Feminist Anti-War Documentary in the Nuclear Age
chapter 9|16 pages
Loving and Not Loving Not a Love Story
part IV|27 pages
Indigenous Presences and Absences
chapter 10|12 pages
It's a Long Way from Invisibility to Visual Sovereignty
chapter 11|13 pages
“It Was the Voice of a Nation”
part V|63 pages
Women's Practice, Collectives, and Partnerships
chapter 13|19 pages
Feministisch Filmkollektief Cinemien and the First International Feminist Film and Video Conference (1981)
chapter 15|12 pages
Film as a Catalyst for Change
part VI|42 pages
Experimental Film
