Spaces of Exception
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Spaces of Exception

C
By Climate Crisis + Media Arts Working Group
Trienens ForumEvanston, IL
February 7, 2024 at 6pm CST
Overview

Join CC+MA for a screening and discussion of Spaces of Exception with filmmaker Matt Peterson and Professor Hannah Feldman


Spaces of Exception

Directed by Matt Peterson and Malek Rasamny, 2019
90 min | in English, Arabic, Diné, and Kanienʼkéha with English subtitles


Wednesday February 7, 2024

6pm
Kresge Hall 1515


Spaces of Exception observes and juxtaposes the communities and resistance movements on the American Indian reservation and in the Palestinian refugee camp, joining distinct spaces produced by settler colonialism in solidarity as sites of struggle for decolonization and indigenous autonomy. Shot between 2014 to 2017 in Arizona, New Mexico, New York, South Dakota, Lebanon and the West Bank, the film features interviews with members of Palestinian militant organizations, environmental activists, autonomous youth committees, and the families of political prisoners and martyrs as well as members of the American Indian Movement, the Mohawk Warrior Society, and Diné families resisting displacement on Black Mesa. It highlights the significance of the land – its memory and divisions – and the conditions for life, community, and sovereignty.

Filmmaker Matt Peterson will be joined by Professor Hannah Feldman (Art History and MENA) for a post-screening discussion

Food will be served!

*

Organized and sponsored by the Climate Crisis + Media Arts Working Group of the Buffett Institute for Global Affairs

Join CC+MA for a screening and discussion of Spaces of Exception with filmmaker Matt Peterson and Professor Hannah Feldman


Spaces of Exception

Directed by Matt Peterson and Malek Rasamny, 2019
90 min | in English, Arabic, Diné, and Kanienʼkéha with English subtitles


Wednesday February 7, 2024

6pm
Kresge Hall 1515


Spaces of Exception observes and juxtaposes the communities and resistance movements on the American Indian reservation and in the Palestinian refugee camp, joining distinct spaces produced by settler colonialism in solidarity as sites of struggle for decolonization and indigenous autonomy. Shot between 2014 to 2017 in Arizona, New Mexico, New York, South Dakota, Lebanon and the West Bank, the film features interviews with members of Palestinian militant organizations, environmental activists, autonomous youth committees, and the families of political prisoners and martyrs as well as members of the American Indian Movement, the Mohawk Warrior Society, and Diné families resisting displacement on Black Mesa. It highlights the significance of the land – its memory and divisions – and the conditions for life, community, and sovereignty.

Filmmaker Matt Peterson will be joined by Professor Hannah Feldman (Art History and MENA) for a post-screening discussion

Food will be served!

*

Organized and sponsored by the Climate Crisis + Media Arts Working Group of the Buffett Institute for Global Affairs

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