@article{93eeb4fcd08f40bd886eb77ea61f597c,
title = "A slog, a push, and a labour of love: How women electronic music artists navigate gendered in/visibility in a creative industry through {\textquoteleft}ameliorative work",
abstract = "This paper draws on semi-structured interviews with 57 women electronic music artists to establish the concept of {\textquoteleft}ameliorative work{\textquoteright} as unrecognised and/or undervalued effort expended in order to make their working life better. We contribute to critical research into gender inequalities in the creative industries, and in particular consider the under-researched issue of women{\textquoteright}s responses to incidents of gender-based discrimination that arise from simultaneously being visible as a woman, while remaining invisible as a creative professional. Ameliorative work is both the potential for betterment and change as well as an effortful burden. We present the complexity of ameliorative work{\textquoteright}s impact on women in creative occupations using paranoid and reparative readings, in order to recognise and empower women{\textquoteright}s agency in managing the discrimination and marginalisation they encounter in their working lives.",
keywords = "Amelioration, Creative Industries, DJs, Electronic Music, Gender discrimination, Gender Inequality, Invisibility, Reparative Reading",
author = "Sam Parsley and Marjana Johansson",
year = "2025",
month = may,
day = "23",
language = "English",
journal = "Organization",
issn = "1350-5084",
publisher = "SAGE Publications Ltd",
}