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Lecture by Molly Geidel (University of Manchester)
This talk by Molly Geidel (University of Manchester) examines how documentary culture and feminist knowledge were shaped by international geopolitics in the 1970s. Specifically, it charts two processes: how Cold War development ideas shaped transnational feminism, and how the new observational trend in development documentary filmmaking invisibilized certain kinds of caring and communicative labor. These processes come together in Brazilian exile Helena Solberg and the International Women’s Film Project’s 1975 observational documentary Double Day, heralded as the first Latin American feminist documentary. The talk explores what the film’s intimate interviews with working-class Latin American women reveal about the relationship between feminism and development in this period.
Events are free and open to the public unless otherwise noted.