Civic Cinema

Civic Cinema: The Take

Event Details

When
12/03/2011
3:00pm - 5:30pm
Where
Prop THTR
3502 North Elston Avenue
Chicago, IL, 60618-5618
United States
See map: Google Maps
Fee: 
Free, open to the public.
Where
Prop THTR
3502 North Elston Avenue
Chicago, IL, 60618-5618
See map: Google Maps
Fee: 
Free, open to the public.

A decade ago in the wake of Argentina's dramatic economic collapse, thirty unemployed auto-parts workers walked into their idle factory in suburban Buenos Aires, rolled out sleeping mats, and refused to leave.  Join us for a screening of The Take, an award-winning documentary by Avi Lewis and Naomi Klein, about a daring movement of Argentinean workers who occupied a bankrupt business to create jobs. A post-screening discussion led by Armando Robles and Beatriz Badikia-Gartler will explore how this simple act - The Take - turned the globalization debate on its head and how it was a precursor to today's Occupy Wall Street movement.  

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Free and open to the public. Reservations are required, reserve your spot here. For mroe information please call 312.422.5580.

If you need a sign interpreter or require other arrangements to fully participate, please call 312.422.5580. For parking locations near the facility, please visit ChicagoParkingMap.com

African Jubilee Film Festival: Touki Bouki & Atlantiques

Event Details

When
08/29/2010
2:00pm - 4:00pm
Where
DuSable Museum of African American History
740 E 56th Pl
Chicago, IL, 60637-1408
United States
See map: Google Maps
County: 
Cook
Fee: 
Free. Open to the public.
Where
DuSable Museum of African American History
740 E 56th Pl
Chicago, IL, 60637-1408
See map: Google Maps
County: 
Cook
Fee: 
Free. Open to the public.

Join us for another edition of the African Jubilee Film Festival as we screen two films: Touki Bouki and Atlantiques. In Touki Bouki, Mory, a cowhered and Anta a university student, dream of a life of glamour and conspicuous consumption in Paris. They hustle, gamble, cheat and steal to gain their passage to Europe while Josephine Baker sings, “Paris, Paris, Paris,” incessantly in the background. This Sengalese film tells the story of a rebellious young Dakar couple’s alienation from Africa and the delusions about Europe.

In Atlantiques, we get a short glimpse into the lives of fugitives who tell their story of escape from North Africa to Spain via the Atlantic Ocean. It reframes the issues raised in Touki Bouki 38 years ago: young people and their desire to escape the economic realities of Africa for the siren call of a proseperous Europe.

Floyd Webb, Independent Filmmaker and Co-Curator of the African Jubilee Film Festival will lead a post-screening discussion and Q & A.

This screening is part of the African Jubilee Film Festival which runs until December 5.

Free and open to the public. For more information, call 312.422.5580.  

If you need a sign interpreter or require other arrangements to fully participate, please call 312.422.5580. For parking locations near the facility, please visit ChicagoParkingMap.com.

 

 

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