Kylie Andrews Kylie Andrews i(19698716 works by)
Gender: Female
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BiographyHistory

Dr Kylie Andrews is an award-winning historian whose writing centres on histories of Australian broadcasting, production studies and gender. Her most recent history is the 2022 book Trailblazing Women of Australian Public Broadcasting, 1945-1975 (Anthem Press), a rich biographical insight into women’s contributions to Australian public broadcasting.  Kylie’s work as a consulting historian and academic covers a broad field, from media and communications to corporate and military history. Prior to becoming a historian she worked in film, radio and television as a production manager and producer.

Most Referenced Works

Notes

  • In addition to works individually indexed on AustLit, Kylie Andrews has also published on oral history and other historical subjects, including Australian history through television documentaries.

Personal Awards

2018 recipient Clare Burton Memorial Scholarship
2018-2019 recipient NSW National Council of Women Australia Day Award
2010 winner Frank Crowley Australian History Prize for UNSW Honours thesis: 'History or Commodity? Negotiating Australian History as Television Documentary/

Awards for Works

y separately published work icon Australian Broadcasting's Female 'Pilgrims' : Women and Work in the Post-war ABC Sydney : 2019 19699051 2019 single work thesis

'This thesis examines the careers of women who attained positions of authority in the privileged environment of Australian public broadcasting between the 1940s and 1970s, and reimagines the nature of women’s work at the Australian Broadcasting Commission (ABC). It counteracts the widespread assumption that women were largely absent in post-war broadcasting, and reveals how and why a group of women, each with their own issues and ideologies to contribute to national debates, used the ABC as a vehicle for their activism. Framed primarily through group biography, this history details how certain ABC women manifested their own agency within the limitations of the time and place, in both the messages they produced as radio and television producers, and through their positions within the gendered post-war workplace. It details the industrial strategies that female broadcasters activated in order to succeed – their transmedial methods, transformative departures, transnational exchanges and technical training – and the key industrial alliances they utilised to traverse previously inaccessible avenues of opportunity. Taking an intersectional approach, this thesis also juxtaposes the careers of elite female producers against the majority of women workers at the ABC, contextualising the barriers, both official and unofficial, that prevented most women from sharing the same authority, opportunity and privilege that their male counterparts experienced. Challenging the male-centric narratives that dominate broadcasting historiography, this thesis examines the systems of exclusion and discrimination in the ABC workplace and highlights the nature of women’s work in public broadcasting; it enriches the historical landscape of women’s experiences and contributions within Australian broadcasting.'

Source: Abstract.

2020 shortlisted The Australian Historical Association Awards Serle Award
Last amended 6 Jul 2022 16:27:34
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