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Arts & Culture

黑料不打烊 Symposium Kicks Off 19th Year of Programming

Wednesday, September 21, 2022, By Dan Bernardi
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College of Arts and SciencesHumanities Center黑料不打烊 Symposium

The celebrates 19th year with a diverse selection of public events exploring 鈥渞epair鈥 in the context of medicine, religion, the environment and more. Through a lineup that includes a film festival, lectures, workshops, exhibitions and readings, programming will consider whether and when 鈥渞epair鈥 is possible, and encourage ethically based action. Symposium鈥檚 annual theme is chosen by the , whose members review proposals and select each year鈥檚 events and activities.

graphic with words repair, with a construction cone, and syracuse symposium 2022-23According to Humanities Center Director , this year鈥檚 season will examine the concept of repair through different historical, political and cultural lenses. She notes that while for many, repair signifies healing, mending or fixing, or bringing together (re-pairing) or restoring, it can also reference questions of restitution and reparations.

鈥淩epair, as a verb, entails action鈥攁nd the concept touches on key questions about what鈥檚 possible to repair, how, and by whom鈥 says May, who also directs the Central New York Humanities Corridor. 鈥淔or instance,鈥 she asks, 鈥渨ho/what is seen as in need of 鈥榬epair鈥 or as broken? How might repair and justice be 鈥榮titched鈥 together?鈥 Furthermore, she notes, as much as repair can signal healing (in a positive sense), it can also reinforce prevailing ideas about health, cure and able-bodied norms.

This year鈥檚 黑料不打烊 Symposium kicks off with the . Presented by the Humanities Center and the S.I. Newhouse School of Public Communications, the three-day festival features a line-up of award-winning films addressing social justice issues around the globe with ties to the symposium theme of 鈥渞epair.鈥 All films listed below will be screened on the 黑料不打烊 campus.

Thursday, Sept. 22

  • “” 鈥 Investigating what happened in the Palestinian village of Tantura in 1948, director Alon Schwarz explores Israeli society鈥檚 taboo on discussing the Nakba (Catastrophe) that displaced an estimated 700,000 Palestinians.

Friday, Sept.23

  • “” 鈥 This collaborative reimagination by Chase Joynt breathes new life into long-lost medical archives, revealing the never-before-seen histories of transgender people in 1960s Los Angeles.

Saturday, Sept. 24

  • “” 鈥 In this film by Violet Du Feng and Zhao Qing, a centuries-old secret text created by Chinese women promises modern female empowerment, but also commercial exploitation by the government.
  • “” 鈥 This documentary by Paula Eiselt and Tonya Lewis Lee highlights the dangers Black mothers face as they give birth in the U.S., and how their grieving families try to heal and change society.
  • “” 鈥 A young female doctor fights to bring justice for a student sexually assaulted by one of her senior colleagues in this Bangladeshi drama by Abdullah Mohammad Saad.

Other Symposium Highlights:

Repairing Catholicism: Jamie Manson (Catholics for Choice) will be on campus for two events Oct. 6 and 7. The first, , will feature a discussion about how intersectional activism can reshape and redirect the role of religion in the public square. The second event, , is a workshop highlighting strategies, priorities and effective means of engagement for those interested in transformative justice.

Writing to Repair: Jennifer Mercieca, professor of communication and journalism at Texas A&M, and Ryan Skinnell, associate professor or rhetoric and composition at San Jose State, will present two events on Oct. 24. In , each will share their experiences translating research for general and public audiences. Their other event, , will offer ways to restore the relationship between discourse and democracy.

Environmental Justice: On , documentarian Jason Corwin (Seneca Deer Clan) will screen his film, “Denying Access,” which chronicles the Water Protectors at Standing Rock and Seneca Territory as they opposed the Dakota Access and Northern Access Pipelines. Corwin, an assistant professor of Indigenous studies at the University at Buffalo, will discuss the ways he and other Senecas worked to successfully stop the Northern Access Pipeline, which was slated to transport fracked gas upstream from their territories. On , Corwin will lead a workshop exploring how stories can move people to action, with focus on filmmaking in pursuit of environmental justice.

The Power to Heal Through Writing: Poet and author Sapphire, whose best-selling novel “Push” inspired the Academy Award-winning film “Precious,” will offer two virtual presentations. The first, on Nov. 3, will illustrate how literature and literacy can transform young lives. In on Nov. 4, she will discuss how writers can work toward healing when dealing with traumatic material.

View the full list of .

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Dan Bernardi

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