Representing Trauma and (Post)colonial Violence

Representing Trauma and (Post)colonial Violence

Come join the conversation as Third Horizon returns to Miami for our 8th Film Festival on May 29th-June 1st.

By Third Horizon Film Festival

Date and time

Sunday, June 1 · 2:15 - 3:15pm EDT

Location

Koubek Center

2705 Southwest 3rd Street Miami, FL 33135

About this event

  • Event lasts 1 hour

How can cinema serve as an act of healing, and/or reckon with the consequences of violence? This panel explores the ways filmmakers engage with the long-term psychological effects of colonialism, state violence, and personal loss. Rather than focusing on direct representations of violence, films like Kouté vwa, True Chronicle of the Blida Joinville Psychiatric Hospital in the Last Century, and Twice into Oblivion center on the aftermath—the lingering trauma, the institutional responses (or lack thereof), and the individual and communal processes of healing.

From the genocidal killing of Haitians in the Dominican Republic in 1937 to Frantz Fanon’s psychiatric work in colonial Algeria to a mother’s grief in French Guiana today, these films meditate on violence and trauma within particular (post)colonial contexts. They also raise ethical questions: How do filmmakers depict trauma without re-traumatizing their audiences or their subjects? What does it mean to tell stories of pain while leaving space for catharsis, resistance, or repair? This conversation will examine the role of cinema in confronting historical violence while fostering new possibilities for healing. 

Third Horizon Film Festival is an exciting annual celebration of cutting-edge Caribbean cinema which runs in person from May 29 to June 1 and online from June 2 to 8. For the second straight year, the Festival will take place at Miami Dade College’s Koubek Center in Little Havana, with the opening night film and party taking place at the Pérez Art Museum Miami.

Tickets and more information at: www.thirdhorizonfilmfestival.com

Organized by

Third Horizon Film Festival returns to Miami May 29 - June 1 for its annual celebration of cutting-edge cinema from the Caribbean, its diasporas and beyond. For the second straight year, the Festival will take place at Miami Dade College’s Koubek Center in Little Havana, with the opening night film and party taking place at the Pérez Art Museum Miami. In addition to the film screenings, there will also be expanded cinema propositions, panel discussions with attending filmmakers, as well as the mind-and-body-liberating social events for which THFF has become legendary.

Free