Indigenous film festival as eco-testimonial encounter – The 2011 Native Film + Video Festival

In struggles for political and cultural recognition many Indigenous groups employ visual media to make their concerns heard. Amongst these various channels for media activism are Indigenous film festivals which, in the words of festival coordinator Amalia Cόrdova, work to convey ‘a sense of solidari...

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Main Author: Salma Monani
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Amsterdam University Press 2013-01-01
Series:NECSUS : European journal of media studies
Online Access:https://www.necsus-ejms.org/test/indigenous-film-festival-as-eco-testimonial-encounter-the-2011-native-film-video-festival/
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spelling doaj-ace3b7ecdd524ff08eae4cff49b900ef2020-11-25T03:54:30ZengAmsterdam University PressNECSUS : European journal of media studies2213-02172013-01-012128529110.5117/NECSUS2013.1.MONAIndigenous film festival as eco-testimonial encounter – The 2011 Native Film + Video FestivalSalma MonaniIn struggles for political and cultural recognition many Indigenous groups employ visual media to make their concerns heard. Amongst these various channels for media activism are Indigenous film festivals which, in the words of festival coordinator Amalia Cόrdova, work to convey ‘a sense of solidarity with Indigenous struggles’. Cόrdova’s essay on Indigenous film festivals appears in the collection Film Festivals and Activism (2012). In the introduction to the collection co-editor Leshu Torchin writes about activist festivals as testimonial encounters or fields of witnessing where the films offer testimony and the audiences serve as witnessing publics, ‘viewers [who] take responsibility for what they have seen and become ready to respond’. To better understand how Indigenous film festivals embody these activist imperatives as eco-activism I consider the case of the 2011 Native American Film and Video Festival (NAFVF) with its special eco-themed focus Mother Earth in Crisis.https://www.necsus-ejms.org/test/indigenous-film-festival-as-eco-testimonial-encounter-the-2011-native-film-video-festival/
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Salma Monani
spellingShingle Salma Monani
Indigenous film festival as eco-testimonial encounter – The 2011 Native Film + Video Festival
NECSUS : European journal of media studies
author_facet Salma Monani
author_sort Salma Monani
title Indigenous film festival as eco-testimonial encounter – The 2011 Native Film + Video Festival
title_short Indigenous film festival as eco-testimonial encounter – The 2011 Native Film + Video Festival
title_full Indigenous film festival as eco-testimonial encounter – The 2011 Native Film + Video Festival
title_fullStr Indigenous film festival as eco-testimonial encounter – The 2011 Native Film + Video Festival
title_full_unstemmed Indigenous film festival as eco-testimonial encounter – The 2011 Native Film + Video Festival
title_sort indigenous film festival as eco-testimonial encounter – the 2011 native film + video festival
publisher Amsterdam University Press
series NECSUS : European journal of media studies
issn 2213-0217
publishDate 2013-01-01
description In struggles for political and cultural recognition many Indigenous groups employ visual media to make their concerns heard. Amongst these various channels for media activism are Indigenous film festivals which, in the words of festival coordinator Amalia Cόrdova, work to convey ‘a sense of solidarity with Indigenous struggles’. Cόrdova’s essay on Indigenous film festivals appears in the collection Film Festivals and Activism (2012). In the introduction to the collection co-editor Leshu Torchin writes about activist festivals as testimonial encounters or fields of witnessing where the films offer testimony and the audiences serve as witnessing publics, ‘viewers [who] take responsibility for what they have seen and become ready to respond’. To better understand how Indigenous film festivals embody these activist imperatives as eco-activism I consider the case of the 2011 Native American Film and Video Festival (NAFVF) with its special eco-themed focus Mother Earth in Crisis.
url https://www.necsus-ejms.org/test/indigenous-film-festival-as-eco-testimonial-encounter-the-2011-native-film-video-festival/
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