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Sunday, Nov 14, 2021
7 PM (125 mins)
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BAMPFA
Daughters of the Dust
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Introduction
Ra Malika Imhotep is a Black feminist writer and performance artist and Doctoral candidate in African Diaspora Studies at UC Berkeley.
Alva Rogers, Cora Lee Day, Barbara O. Jones, Cheryl Lynn Bruce,
“There exists a fear of Black people using our culture to make statements in codes. It’s the modern variation on the fear that led slaveholders to take our drums away” (Julie Dash). On a summer day in 1902, the Peazant family prepares to leave their island home off the Georgia coast and a way of life to which there is no return. With authenticity in every detail, including the Gullah language, Julie Dash told this story in the circular manner of a West African griot or storyteller—“the way an old relative would retell it, not linear but always coming back around.” A film experienced in sequences, from the perspectives of several generations of women, including an unborn daughter, Daughters of the Dust creates a fabric of universal themes: the conflicts between personal and collective history, and between spiritual and industrial life; and the strength of bonds between sisters, daughters, and mothers. In Daughters of the Dust, Dash created her own cinematic codes, a challenge that faces all women filmmakers.
FILM DETAILS
Screenwriter
- Julie Dash
Cinematographer
- Arthur Jafa
Language
- English
- Gullah
Print Info
- Color
- DCP
- 113 mins
Source
- Cohen Media