Film Streaming Past as Process, Pt. I: Redrawing the Past

Past as Process -  Part I Cover © RomaTrial, Elliot Blue, Can Candan

Mon, 06/21/2021 -
Thu, 06/24/2021

7:00 AM - 7:00 AM

Online

Curated by Karina Griffith, this virtual film program is presented as part of the Goethe-Institut North America's project Shaping the Past.

Films are available to viewers in the USA, Canada, and Mexico from
06-21-2021, from 7:00 AM (PDT) through 06-24-2021 at 7:00AM (PDT)

RSVP via EVENTIVE Past as Process: ​Redrawing the Past
In their animations and colorful subtitles, these films toast the tellings of history with subjective points of view.

Memory Boxes 
Germany, (2019) 9 minutes. In English. Director: Hamze Bytyçi 
To protect himself from the trauma of the past, Zoni Weisz blocked all of his family memories. Not just the horrible memories of their deportation to Auschwitz and the empty apartment left behind, but also the beautiful ones: of his little sister’s coat, the forest, and his aunt’s caravan. Based on Weisz’s memoir The Forgotten Holocaust, this short animated film, produced by RomaTrial e. V. and the Foundation Memorial to the Murdered Jews of Europe, visualizes the emotional side of Weisz’s harrowing journey from Dutch Sinto Holocaust survivor to activist.

Home?
Germany, (2018) 18 minutes. In English. Director: Elliot Blue
Blue moves from small-town Germany to the capital city of Berlin. Through stream-of-consciousness musings to their diary and hand-drawn animation, the short documentary inscribes with what is outside of the frame: the colonial history and context to Black life in Europe. A humorous and infectious declaration of unrequited love to Germany.

Duvarlar – Mauern – Walls
Turkey, Germany, (1991) 85 minutes. In German, Turkish, & English with English subtitles. Director: Can Candan
Made just two years after the fall of the Berlin Wall, Duvarlar – Mauern – Walls shapes the past through oral histories that show the vast diversity of arrival stories in Germany. Through personal interviews, the documentary tells the remarkable stories of how Turkish intellectuals, artists, and guest workers created a home for themselves in Germany to make a significant contribution to German business and culture. Candan’s provocative personal refections: “How does a foreigner become an immigrant?” and colorful subtitles punctuate the intimate perspectives in this timeless film.

Shaping the Past / Gestaltung der Vergangenheit is a project of the Goethe-Instituts and Pop Ups in North America (Canada, USA, and Mexico) that connects with and builds on the work of emerging leaders of local, national, and transnational movements to remember through reflection and with urgency. It is a partnership between the Goethe-Institut, the Monument Lab, and the Federal Agency for Civic Education (Bundeszentrale für politische Bildung / bpb).
 

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