D(eco)lonize
Thursday, September 10, 22:45 - 00:03 / Kijkhuis 1
Saturday, September 12, 10:30 - 11:48 / Kijkhuis 2
The destructive forces of climate change are inherently impartial. So why is it that we continue to see black, brown, and indigenous communities constantly being hit the hardest by climate disaster? This selection of films examines how in a colonial-settler capitalist society, land and resource exploitation goes hand in hand with erasure of indiginous culture.
The effects of environmental racism can be seen across the various contexts of these films, spanning from the global south to the global north. How can short film provide an insight into the struggles being faced by these affected groups? What role does cinema have to play in decolonizing the climate movement?
We recommend watching this session prior to attending the event, ‘Decolonizing the Eco Hero’. At this discussion, we will be joined by Nadir Bouhmouch (dir. Timnadin N Rif) and Patricia Ribas (dir. Tribal Affairs).
Duration
78 min.
In this era of “reconciliation with Indigenous Nations”, native land is still being taken at gunpoint.
"Nocturnal Kinshasa, capital of the Democratic Republic of the Congo, is illuminated with thousands of cheap portable LEDs.
A rebellion in the Rif mountains has shaken the Moroccan state, hundreds have been arrested.
Tribal Affairs combines footage of native Germans dancing in a tent with audio and subtitled observations from the women of Baniwa ethnicity. Here, they are viewers, too.
Santa Cruz del Islote is a three-acre island fifty miles off the coast of Cartagena, Colombia.
There is so much to feel guilty about nowadays, when you think about it.