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Wednesday 18 May 2022

A New Skilled Migration? Turkish Media Practitioners in Britain [online panel]

 

A New Skilled Migration?: Turkish Media Practitioners in Britain [online panel: Teams link

 

8 JUNE 2022, WEDNESDAY, 13:00-14:30

 

ORGANISERS AND RESPONDENTS: ECE BULUT (NTU PGR), CUNEYT CAKIRLAR (NTU), ZEYNEP SERINKAYA WINTER (NTU PGR)

 

 

Turkey is experiencing a new boom in media production, with an increase on VoD platforms, high demand for TV series and significant place of TV productions in export revenues. Yet, media practitioners also face many challenges, ranging from issues of workplace safety and precarious working conditions to censorship and political pressures. A young, dynamic, educated, and experienced population of media practitioners have started looking for opportunities abroad. In this panel, we aim to start a conversation on whether this has resulted in a new wave of skilled migration from Turkey to Britain. The panel will seek to cover various aspects of the migration process, the motives for the migration, challenges, and opportunities the practitioners have found in the British media sector, differences in media cultures in both contexts, ways of building networks as a migrant and how the process may contribute to the work of the practitioners themselves as well as the wider British media sector. Opening a space to discuss different migrant experiences, we hope that the conversation will introduce an emerging phenomenon which remains under-researched. 

 

 

PANELISTS:

 

GÖZDE KOYUNCU

 

Gözde Koyuncu is a cinematographer with 10+ years of experience in TVC's, fashion films, music videos, feature fiction/documentaries and TV shows. Her latest work, an 8-episode Netflix original drama Who Were We Running From? (in post-production and set for global release, late 2022). Koyuncu started her career in Turkey when shee was one of three women DOPs to professionally excel within a male dominated industry. Ambition and passion have helped her succeed in becoming a critically-acclaimed and an award winning DOP. She was included in the Dream Team of 2021 selected by MediaCat Magazine, and at the same year, she won the Best Cinematography Award at the Felis Advertising Awards - Commercial Films Category. She has recently relocated to London.

 

MARSHA FRANCO 

 

Born in 1986 in Izmir, Turkey, Marsha Franco earned her BA in Film and TV studies from Galatasaray University. She was selected to participate in Istanbul Film FestivalMeeting on the Bridge” pitching forum in 2013 with her original script. After working as a producers assistant at Anima Istanbul, she went on to being a producer at PTOT Film. During her five years there, she worked on numerous TV commercials around Turkey. She took part in the feature film Ikimizin Yerine” as a producers assistant and in Aile Arasinda” as production coordinator. After moving to London in 2020, she is now working as Integrated Producer at Tag Collective Arts and continuing her personal projects.

 

EMİNE SOYDANYAVAŞ

 

Born in 1982 in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia, Emine Soydanyavas earned her BA in Photography & Video from Yildiz Technical University, Fine Arts Faculty, Istanbul, Turkey. After her graduation she started working in the Turkish Film Industry as a Production Coordinator at a company that provides Production Servicing to foreign films shooting in Turkey. She moved to London in 2016 and has been working as coordinator on major feature films. She has a wide range of experiences from internet commercials to multi-million dollar projects.


Tuesday 10 May 2022

Symposium: Transnational Horror, Folklore, and Cultural Politics





Focusing on the historical legacies and contemporary trends of folk horror across various geographical and industrial contexts of filmmaking, the symposium aims to facilitate an inquiry that unpacks social, cultural, and political meanings behind the current revival of the genre, and locates these meanings in local, national, regional and transnational settings of cultural production. Ranging from non-Anglophone histories of folk/paranormal horror, and the cross-cultural mobilities of the genre in various national and transnational contexts of film production, to the emerging issues of representation, identity politics, genre, style and inter-medial convergences of contemporary gothic narratives, the symposium will feature diverse methodological approaches to the study of folklore on screen by also intervening into the Anglo-American dominance of horror studies.

 

Organizer:

Cüneyt Çakırlar, Associate Professor in Film & Visual Culture, Nottingham Trent University, UK

 

Confirmed Speakers:

Gary Needham, Senior Lecturer in Film Studies, University of Liverpool, UK

Nikki J.Y. Lee, Senior Lecturer in Asian Media, Nottingham Trent University, UK

Zahra Khosroshahi,Lecturer in Film and Television Studies, University of Glasgow, UK

Rosalind Galt, Professor of Film Studies, King’s College London, UK

Gustavo Subero, Lecturer in Visual Cultures & Science Humanities, Imperial College London, UK

Cüneyt Çakırlar, Associate Professor in Film & Visual Culture, Nottingham Trent University, UK

Iain Robert Smith, Senior Lecturer in Film Studies, King’s College London, UK.

Vlad Strukov, Associate Professor in Film and Digital Culture, University of Leeds, UK.

Johnny Walker, Associate Professor, Northumbria University, UK

Alicia Izharuddin, Senior Lecturer in Gender Studies, University of Malaya, Malaysia

 

Time:

18 May 2022, Wednesday, 09:00-17:30

 

Venue:

Nottingham Trent University, School of Arts and Humanities, Chaucer Building (CHR 1803, LT4)

Goldsmith Street, Nottingham NG1 4BU


18 May 2022, Wednesday, 09:00-17:30

Nottingham Trent University, School of Arts and Humanities, Chaucer Building (CHR 1803, LT4)

Goldsmith Street, Nottingham NG1 4BU

This event is free. The symposium will not be live-streamed. To register, please contact the organiser Cüneyt Çakırlar. 

For the detailed programme, please visit the project site.


 



Tuesday 3 May 2022

 The Centre was extremely pleased to welcome this conference at the end of April: 

14th BAAL (British Association of Applied Linguistics) Language, Gender and Sexuality SIG Event: Language, Gender and Health Inequalities, 29th April 2022.



 

Event Schedule


10.15-11.00 Keynote address: Dr Francis-Ray White (University of Westminster) (room 121-122)


11.15 Panel 1: Language and gender-based inequalities in pregnancy and childcare (room 121-122)


11.15-11.45 ‘At the breast is best?’ A Feminist Critical Discourse Analysis of normative and non-normative babyfeeding practices in online infant feeding promotional discourse (Laura Coffey-Glover and Victoria Howard,Nottingham Trent University)


11.45-12.15 The Language of Pregnancy Loss: Time for a change? (Beth Malory, University of Lancaster)


12.15-12.45 Gender and Agency in the Linguistic Landscape of Ireland’s 2018 Referendum Campaign on Abortion (Louis Strange)


1.45 Panel 2: Language, gender and illness (room 121-122)


1.45-2.15 Perceptions of Breast Health Practices among South Asian Women Living in the North West of England (Linda McLoughlin)


2.15-2.45 ‘Vulnerable Women and Dead Men’: A corpus-based analysis of discourses on Twitter about gendered social actors who have dementia (Ivana Babicova, Frazer Heritage and David Robertshaw)


2.45-3.15 Gender Construal and Gender Attraction in Analysing Linguistic Indicators of Mood Disorders (Kate Sayers)


3.15-4.00 Round-table (room 121-122): using research in Language, Gender and

Sexuality for improving healthcare communication (Gavin Brookes, Karen Kinloch, Sylvia Jaworska and Francis-Ray White)

 

4.15-4.45 Judith Baxter Award talk – Aimee Bailey, De Montfort University (room 121-122)