Back to Cinematexas homepage

 
Back to Cinematexas homepage




PARALLAX VIEW: THE POLITICAL ECONOMY OF IMAGES
PALESTINE 2002


Sept. 20-21 | Flawn Academic Center Room 21 | UT Campus | Free admission



From stone throwing children in the refugee camps of the Gaza Strip to the luxurious Bethlehem mansion of a grieving mother, from an Israeli artist colony in the Carmel Hills to former guards of Ansar prison camp discussing the Geneva Convention with ex-detainees, the Parallax View program moves beyond the headlines to expose the complex machinations of occupation.

A two-day exploration of one of the most explosive issues in the world today with controversial historians Norman Finkelstein and Marc Ellis, graphic novelist Seth Tobocman, Ramallah-based documentarian Alia Arasoughly, image artists Jayce Salloum and Nida Sinnokrot, and filmmakers Rachel Leah Jones, James Longley, and VPRO.



FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 20
Flawn Academic Center Room 21 | UT Campus | Free admission

7:00 pm | James Longley's Gaza Strip introduced by Norman Finkelstein



SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 21
Flawn Academic Center Room 21 | UT Campus | Free admission

1:00 pm | Diogenes: Ansar 3, dirs. Hans Fels, Eitan Wetzler

2:00 pm | Norman Finkelstein

3:00 pm | Marc Ellis

4:00 pm | 500 Dunam on the Moon, dir. Rachel Leah Jones

5:00 pm | Seth Tobocman

6:00 pm | Up to the South, dir. Jayce Salloum

7:00 pm | This is Not Living, dir. Alia Arasoughly



ART INSTALLATIONS:

Al-Jaz/CNN
Nida Sinnokrot
Sept. 18-22 | The Hideout (617 Congress) | Free admission

Everything and Nothing

Jayce Salloum
Sept. 21-22 |
IDEA at the Bread Factory (704 Tillery St.) | Free admission







welcome | festival 2002 | schedule | venues | tickets | cinemakids! | press | sponsors | festival 2001 | award-winners | contact