Forty-Seven DJs, Four Women: Meritocracy, Talent, and Postfeminist Politics

In 2016, only four of forty-seven DJs booked for Musikkfest, a festival in Oslo, Norway, were women. Following this, a local DJ published an objection to this imbalance in a local arts and entertainment magazine. Her editorial provoked booking agents to defend their position on the grounds that they...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Tami Gadir
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Griffith University 2017-11-01
Series:Dancecult: Journal of Electronic Dance Music Culture
Subjects:
DJ
Online Access:https://dj.dancecult.net/index.php/dancecult/article/view/940
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spelling doaj-957fa9561a984062943b53d07b00c6562020-11-24T23:01:20ZengGriffith UniversityDancecult: Journal of Electronic Dance Music Culture1947-54032017-11-0191507210.12801/1947-5403.2017.09.01.03687Forty-Seven DJs, Four Women: Meritocracy, Talent, and Postfeminist PoliticsTami Gadir0Department of Musicology, University of OsloIn 2016, only four of forty-seven DJs booked for Musikkfest, a festival in Oslo, Norway, were women. Following this, a local DJ published an objection to this imbalance in a local arts and entertainment magazine. Her editorial provoked booking agents to defend their position on the grounds that they prioritise skill and talent when booking DJs, and by implication, that they do not prioritise equality. The booking agents’ responses, on social media and in interviews I conducted, highlight their perpetuation of a status quo in dance music cultures where men disproportionately dominate the role of DJing. Labour laws do not align with this cultural attitude: gender equality legislation in Norway’s recent history contrasts the postfeminist attitudes expressed by dance music’s cultural intermediaries such as DJs and booking agents. The Musikkfest case ultimately shows that gender politics in dance music cultures do not necessarily correspond to dance music’s historical associations with egalitarianism.https://dj.dancecult.net/index.php/dancecult/article/view/940Dance musicDJgenderpoliticspostfeminism
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Tami Gadir
spellingShingle Tami Gadir
Forty-Seven DJs, Four Women: Meritocracy, Talent, and Postfeminist Politics
Dancecult: Journal of Electronic Dance Music Culture
Dance music
DJ
gender
politics
postfeminism
author_facet Tami Gadir
author_sort Tami Gadir
title Forty-Seven DJs, Four Women: Meritocracy, Talent, and Postfeminist Politics
title_short Forty-Seven DJs, Four Women: Meritocracy, Talent, and Postfeminist Politics
title_full Forty-Seven DJs, Four Women: Meritocracy, Talent, and Postfeminist Politics
title_fullStr Forty-Seven DJs, Four Women: Meritocracy, Talent, and Postfeminist Politics
title_full_unstemmed Forty-Seven DJs, Four Women: Meritocracy, Talent, and Postfeminist Politics
title_sort forty-seven djs, four women: meritocracy, talent, and postfeminist politics
publisher Griffith University
series Dancecult: Journal of Electronic Dance Music Culture
issn 1947-5403
publishDate 2017-11-01
description In 2016, only four of forty-seven DJs booked for Musikkfest, a festival in Oslo, Norway, were women. Following this, a local DJ published an objection to this imbalance in a local arts and entertainment magazine. Her editorial provoked booking agents to defend their position on the grounds that they prioritise skill and talent when booking DJs, and by implication, that they do not prioritise equality. The booking agents’ responses, on social media and in interviews I conducted, highlight their perpetuation of a status quo in dance music cultures where men disproportionately dominate the role of DJing. Labour laws do not align with this cultural attitude: gender equality legislation in Norway’s recent history contrasts the postfeminist attitudes expressed by dance music’s cultural intermediaries such as DJs and booking agents. The Musikkfest case ultimately shows that gender politics in dance music cultures do not necessarily correspond to dance music’s historical associations with egalitarianism.
topic Dance music
DJ
gender
politics
postfeminism
url https://dj.dancecult.net/index.php/dancecult/article/view/940
work_keys_str_mv AT tamigadir fortysevendjsfourwomenmeritocracytalentandpostfeministpolitics
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