Unequal opera-tunities: gender inequality and non-standard work in US opera production

Author:

Vincent CaitlinORCID,Coles AmandaORCID

Abstract

PurposeThis paper examines the US opera sector as a means for interrogating how varying forms of non-standard work shape gender inequality in the creative industries.Design/methodology/approachThe authors draw on 16 seasons of opera production data from Operabase.com to conduct a gender-based exploratory data analysis of the key creative roles of conductor, director and designers, as well as the hiring networks through which teams are formed, at the 11 largest opera companies in the United States.FindingsThe authors find that women, as a group, experienced gender-based disadvantage across the key creative roles of opera production, but particularly in the artistic leadership roles of conductor and director. The authors also find that women's exclusion in the field is being further perpetuated by the sector's non-standard and overlapping employment structures, which impacts women practitioners' professional visibility and career opportunities.Practical implicationsThe study can help organizations implement strategic hiring practices that acknowledge the relationship between gender inequality and varying forms of non-standard work with the aim of increasing women's representation.Originality/value This study work establishes the scale of gender inequality operating within a sector that has received minimal scholarly attention as a site of employment. The study analysis also offers important insight for the wider creative industries and highlights opportunities to redress gender inequality in other sectors where project-based work is prevalent.

Publisher

Emerald

Subject

Organizational Behavior and Human Resource Management,Cultural Studies,Gender Studies

Reference35 articles.

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3. Brook, O., O'Brien, D. and Taylor, M. (2018), “Panic: it's an arts emergency: panic! Social class, taste and inequalities in the creative industries”, available at: https://createlondon.org/event/panic2018/

4. Inequality talk: how discourses by senior men reinforce exclusions from creative occupations;European Journal of Cultural Studies,2021

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