Immigration and Exile
A Dish Of Central America
Production Year: 1988
Runtime: 58:00
Producers:
Michael Murphy
Series:
Deep Dish Cooks Up a Second Series
Locale: Central America
Subjects:
Environmental Studies,
Ethnic Studies,
Labor Studies,
Latin-American Studies,
Latino Studies,
Peace Studies,
Women's Studies,
Anthropology,
Art and Literature,
Central America,
Human Rights,
Immigration and Exile,
Mexico,
Indigenous Studies
CatalogueNumber: 03226
The goal of this video is to bring to light some of the popular misconceptions that people have about Central America. It brings together experpts to help people understand the various countries that make up the region.
[View Program Details]
American Roots
Victor Hernandez Cruz, Joy Harjo, Phillip Levine
Victor Cruz grew up in Manhattan's lower East Side; Joy Harjo, a member of the Creek Indian Nation, was raised on a reservation in the Southwest; Philip Levine grew up in a working-class Jewish neighborhood in Detroit.
[View Program Details]
Andrei Codrescu and Christopher Hitchens
After the Revolution
Andrei Codrescu, Romanian exile poet and frequent contributor to NPR's popular radio program "All Things Considered" speaks with journalist Christopher Hitchens about the betrayal of Romania's December 1989 Revolution.
[View Program Details]
Breaking Conventions
Production Year: 1996
Runtime: 58:00
Producers:
Cheche Martinez,
Joan Sekler
Series:
Unofficial Coverage of the 1996 Political Conventions
Subjects:
Political Science,
Latino Studies,
Urban Studies,
Human Rights,
Immigration and Exile,
Mass Media/Popular Culture,
Politics,
Racism,
Mexico,
Unions,
Community Media
CatalogueNumber: 03457
The San Diego and Los Angeles Alternative Media Networks go to the Republican Convention. Surfers and Bikers for Bush and Newt, border crossers and party crashers. A Clinton piñata gets smashed and Paul Krassner comments.
[View Program Details]
Carolyn Forche and Larry Heineman
The Ubiquitous Front-line
The Ubiquitous Front-line Larry Heinemann, whose novel, "Paco's Story" won the National Book Award, and Carolyn Forche, whose searing poems about the war in El Salvador have won her wide critical acclaim, read excerpts from their work and speak forcefully about the consequences of imperialism on the peoples of the world.
[View Program Details]
Culture and Identity
Production Year: 1992
Runtime: 58:00
Producers:
Pedro Rivera,
Susan Zeig,
Centro Estudios Puertorriquenos
Series:
Beyond the Browning of America
Locale: U.S., Puerto Rico
Subjects:
Globalization Studies,
Latin-American Studies,
Latino Studies,
Urban Studies,
Art and Literature,
Immigration and Exile,
Music and Performance,
Post-Colonialism,
Racism,
Cultural Studies,
Indigenous Studies
CatalogueNumber: 03385
Latino writers, musicians, painters and performers seize the TV screen and remind us to listen to Latino voices to hear our own conscience. With Maria Hinojosa.
[View Program Details]
Environmental Racism
This program examines the phenomenon of environmental racism and shows what grassroots movements are doing to redefine issues such as housing, education and health as environmental concerns.
[View Program Details]
Guantanamo, Int'l Law and the War on Terror
Barbara Olshansky at the World Tribunal on Iraq
Barbara Olshansky is an attorney with the Center for Constitutional Rights. This piece is drawn from her speech at the World Tribunal on Iraq, which took place from June 23-25, 2005 in Istanbul, Turkey. She covers the range of legal and political measures employed by the U.S. government in the "global war on terror" both within the United States and outside. Including a discussion of anti-immigrant measures, enemy combatant status, detentions around the world, and the treatment of detainees.
[View Program Details]
Imperial Geography - Palestine/Israel
Why the Hot Spots are Hot
A look at the maps of Palestine over the decades provides insight into the conflict that has roiled the Middle East for more than sixty years. "Imperial Geography - Palestine and Israel" examines the role of the imperial powers, the European and American map makers, who set up the horrors that have unfolded in the anything but holly "Holy Land."
[View Program Details]
Iraqi Refugees - Ikhlass Story
The interview focuses on one Iraqi survivor and her two young daughters. Ihklass recounts the tragic story that detrmined her fate as a refugee, and she speaks out against American occupiers who destroyed her world. This surviving small family continues to seek resettlement in a third country.
Please make donations for this project to:
IRAQI STUDENT PROJECT
and
COLLATERAL REPAIR PROJECT
[View Program Details]
Manufacturing the Enemy
Gulf Crisis TV Project
Gulf Crisis TV Project: made in collaboration with Paper Tiger. Manufacturing the Enemy includes interviews with Arab Americans victimized by violence and racism during and after the first Gulf War. Their experiences are compared with those of Japanese Americans during and after the Second World War.
[View Program Details]
Octavio Paz and Carlos Fuentes
The City as Man
Mexico City: home of the Nobel Prize winning poet Octavio Paz and Latin American essayist Carlos Fuentes. For both writers, Mexico City, the largest metropolitan city in the world, becomes a metaphor for all that is right and all that is wrong with contemporary society and culture.
[View Program Details]
Off the Record
Production Year: 1996
Runtime: 58:00
Producers:
Kate Kirtz,
counter media
Series:
Unofficial Coverage of the 1996 Political Conventions
Subjects:
Political Science,
Native American Studies,
Urban Studies,
Human Rights,
Immigration and Exile,
Politics,
Prisons,
Information,
Unions,
Community Media,
Gender Studies,
Gay, Lesbian, Bi, Transgender,
International Relations,
Housing,
Elections,
Poverty
CatalogueNumber: 03458
Alternative coverage of the 1996 Democratic National Convention. Housing, racism and other issues that were being left out of the convention agenda.Demo with Safiya Bukari and Chicago housing activists,a Native Pipe Ceremony,demo by gays and lesbians for marriage rights, protest against repression of Jorge Guillen, Puerto Rican activist.
[View Program Details]
Resistencia y Solidaridad
El Salvador, Colombia, and the U.S. Solidarity Movement
Production Year: 2009
Runtime: 4:00:00
Series:
DIY Media: Movement Perspectives on Critical Moments
Subjects:
Political Science,
Media Studies,
American Studies,
Globalization Studies,
Latin-American Studies,
Social Movement Studies,
Central America,
Economic Development,
Human Rights,
Immigration and Exile,
Community Media,
International Relations,
Indigenous Studies
CatalogueNumber: 03486
Resistencia y Solidaridad examines the U.S. role in Latin America, and the work that solidarity activists in the United States have played in challenging their own government's agenda, frequently using video and film as a tool for galvanizing public opposition to U.S. policies. Part Four of DIY Media: Movement Perspectives on Critical Moments.
[View Program Details]
Stirring Up the Myth of the Melting Pot
Part 5
Production Year: 1990
Runtime: 28:00
Producers:
Martha Wallner
Editors: Fiona Boneham
Series:
Spigot For Bigots Or Channels For Change?
Locale: NYC, San Diego, Tijuana, MX
Subjects:
Media Studies,
Ethnic Studies,
Latin-American Studies,
Latino Studies,
Peace Studies,
Art and Literature,
Central America,
Human Rights,
Immigration and Exile,
Music and Performance,
Racism,
International Relations
CatalogueNumber: 03331
Part 5 of the Spigot for Bigot series presents different perspectives on the notion that this is a multi-cultural and pluralistic society.
[View Program Details]
Stirring Up the Myth of the Melting Pot
Part 6
Production Year: 1990
Runtime: 28:00
Producers:
Martha Wallner
Editors: Fiona Boneham
Series:
Spigot For Bigots Or Channels For Change?
Subjects:
Media Studies,
Globalization Studies,
Latin-American Studies,
Latino Studies,
Art and Literature,
Central America,
Human Rights,
Immigration and Exile,
Racism,
Community Media,
International Relations
CatalogueNumber: 03332
Part 5 and 6 of the Spigot for Bigot series presents different perspectives on the notion that this is a multi-cultural and pluralistic society. segment of "Stirring up the Melting Pot" focuses on racism initated and fostered in the media.
[View Program Details]
The Border: Where Do you Draw the Line?
Where Do You Draw the Line?
Production Year: 1988
Runtime: 58:00
Producers:
DeeDee Halleck,
Dan Martin
Series:
Deep Dish Cooks Up a Second Series
Locale: Ireland, Panama, South Africa, Israel, Mexico, South Bronx
Subjects:
Crime, Law, and Justice,
Latin-American Studies,
Peace Studies,
Immigration ,
Human Rights,
Immigration and Exile,
Politics,
Population Studies,
Post-Colonialism,
Sociology,
Mexico,
Cultural Studies
CatalogueNumber: 03222
This video describes the violence and harrassment experienced in many locations around the world: Northern Ireland, Panama, Mexico and the South Bronx, illustrating the arbitraty nature of "where the line is drawn".
[View Program Details]
Theres no Place like Home: Housing Crisis, USA
All kinds of people nationwide are suffering from the severe shortage of affordable housing.
[View Program Details]
Una Historia/A History
A bilingual board game where La Pinta, La Nina and Santa Maria take turns in the construction of Western history.
[View Program Details]