This article presents a case study of the Australian children’s television programme, First Day (ABC Australia 2020‐present), which depicts a young transgender girl’s experiences beginning high school. The article explores the screenwriting process involved in creating inclusive and diverse children’s television, drawing on an original interview with Julie Kalceff, the show’s screenwriter and director. Kalceff discusses her screenwriting process writing for and about children who occupy liminal and marginal spaces and the research, writing and consultation processes undertaken to create her pioneering work with trans characters as lead protagonists. The resulting series explores the universal experience of starting the high school journey, ...
Transgender (or trans) voices have not been widely explored in media studies literature. This qualit...
Despite increasing visibility, members of the transgender community continue to experience discrimin...
Intersex has been neglected in Australian television and especially in films. This research study pr...
The transgender, gender-atypical or intersex protagonist challenges normative assumptions and expect...
The transgender, gender-atypical or intersex protagonist challenges normative assumptions and expect...
The transgender, gender-atypical or intersex protagonist challenges normative assumptions and expect...
This pilot project, conducted with young people who identify as gender and sexuality diverse, was un...
A 2008 study published in the Future of Children journal (Princeton University) found that the type ...
Screen Australia has released the most significant study of diversity on Australian screens since te...
This paper explores transgender representation across televisual media from broadcast and cable tele...
Concepts of gender are socially constructed through a variety of influences, including the media. Th...
AbstractThis article explores the recent surge in television representations of transgender children...
This thesis addressed the gap in scholarship on how transgender characters and themes are represente...
This article delivers preliminary findings from a series of interviews with Australian migrant produ...
This paper identifies a significant yet often overlooked tradition of male-to-female transgender rep...
Transgender (or trans) voices have not been widely explored in media studies literature. This qualit...
Despite increasing visibility, members of the transgender community continue to experience discrimin...
Intersex has been neglected in Australian television and especially in films. This research study pr...
The transgender, gender-atypical or intersex protagonist challenges normative assumptions and expect...
The transgender, gender-atypical or intersex protagonist challenges normative assumptions and expect...
The transgender, gender-atypical or intersex protagonist challenges normative assumptions and expect...
This pilot project, conducted with young people who identify as gender and sexuality diverse, was un...
A 2008 study published in the Future of Children journal (Princeton University) found that the type ...
Screen Australia has released the most significant study of diversity on Australian screens since te...
This paper explores transgender representation across televisual media from broadcast and cable tele...
Concepts of gender are socially constructed through a variety of influences, including the media. Th...
AbstractThis article explores the recent surge in television representations of transgender children...
This thesis addressed the gap in scholarship on how transgender characters and themes are represente...
This article delivers preliminary findings from a series of interviews with Australian migrant produ...
This paper identifies a significant yet often overlooked tradition of male-to-female transgender rep...
Transgender (or trans) voices have not been widely explored in media studies literature. This qualit...
Despite increasing visibility, members of the transgender community continue to experience discrimin...
Intersex has been neglected in Australian television and especially in films. This research study pr...