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Surviving Memory

“Surviving Memory” is a film about the role of loss in the formation of identity. It is a narrative intercut with documentary fragments of political actions, which connect the various characters to event through collective memory. Through autobiographical spoken texts, the narrator relays fragments of a relationship between two Jewish women. The fragmented texts speak of the relation between these women as well as recounting various past and contemporary historical events of fascist and neo-Nazi activity (and resistance), Lesbian/Gay rights, Pro-Choice and AIDS demonstrations. While these instances tell a personal/political story about loss, they are also meant to elucidate the complexity of the process of diasporic identification and the relation of memory to historical event.

Film Maker
Flanders, Elle
Year
1996
Country
Canada
Length
9
Category
history, Jewish, LGBTQ, political activism, Politics + Policy, Race + Ethnicity, Resistance, Work about Women, Work by Women
Genre
documentary, experimental, narrative, queer