Tuesday, February 14 | 12:15–1:15 PM ET | Zoom
Register to attend: https://dartgo.org/conversations-chowdhury
Cinematic media have long been important for remembering and memorializing the 1971 Bangladesh War of Liberation (or, Muktijuddho). They have also been important vehicles for critiquing and reconciling with war’s trauma.
Analyzing Muktijuddho films through Black and transnational feminist frameworks, Elora Halim Chowdhury (University of Massachusetts Boston) considers the power and potential of human rights cinema. As Chowdhury shows, cinematic representations not only portray marginalized experiences but also put those experiences on a global stage.
Film and media scholars Gwendolyn S. Kirk (Indiana University Bloomington) and Alka Kurian (University of Washington Bothell) will be joining the author for this discussion.
Elizabeth Lhost will moderate.
Register to attend the webinar: https://dartgo.org/conversations-chowdhury
All are welcome to attend.
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The Conversations on South Asia Series is sponsored by the Bodas Family Academic Programming Fund, the Asian Societies, Cultures, and Languages Program, and the Department of History at Dartmouth College.