Filmmaker Discussion: Mai Masri & Miriam Cooke

  • Virtual


  • 08/28/2021
  • 12 pm CT

Event details

Mizna is pleased to present a discussion between renowned filmmaker Mai Masri and scholar Miriam Cooke. Masri and Cooke will discuss Suspended Dreams, directed in 1992 by Masri and her late husband Jean Chamoun, as well as Masri’s filmography, which focuses on the real life struggles of the women and children living in the Occupied Palestinian and Lebanon.

This virtual discussion takes place Saturday, August 28 at 12pm CT.

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Encountering the real effects of destruction, the films presented in Mizna Film Series: Beirut complicate the relationship between fact and fiction, using poetry and other forms of intermediality to witness what emerges from ruins. Beirut, a city that has often been the site of sectarian, colonialist, and imperialist violence, is a context which produces films that critically engage with images related to moments during, between, and after war and upheaval. In August, we present a selection titled Post/Protracted Civil War which features films by Mai Masri and Jean Chamoun, Jalal Toufic and Graziella Rizkallah Toufic, and Ghassan Salhab. In September, Mizna will screen Birds of September by Sarah Francis.

>>HOW TO PARTICIPATE<<

This event will be livestreamed on Eventive and Facebook. To ask questions or add your comments, you can interact in the chat section on Eventive, or leave a comment on the Facebook livestream.

>>ACCESSIBILITY<<

This event will be live-captioned in English. A recording of the event will be available shortly after the discussion concludes.

ABOUT THE PARTICIPANTS

Mai Masri is a Beirut-based Palestinian filmmaker who studied film at San Francisco State University. She founded Nour Productions with her husband, Jean Chamoun, and directed several award-winning films that focus on the humanity and resilience of ordinary people living through extraordinary times. Mai’s debut feature 3000 Nights (2015) was premiered at Toronto International Film Festival, and won over 28 international awards. Her filmography includes: Under the Rubble(1983), Wildflowers (1986), War Generation – Beirut (1989), Children of Fire (1990), Suspended Dreams (1992), Hanan Ashrawi (1995), Children of Shatila (1998), Frontiers of Dreams and Fears(2001), Beirut Diaries (2006), 33 Days (2007), and Beirut Eye of the Storm (2021).

Miriam Cooke is a professor of modern Arabic literature and culture at Duke University. Her writings have focused on the intersection of gender and war in modern Arabic literature and on Arab women writers’ constructions of Islamic feminism. Her more recent interests have turned to Arab cultural studies with a concentration on Syria, and to the networked connections among Arabs and Muslims around the world. She is the author of several monographs, including “War’s Other Voices: Women Writers on the Lebanese Civil War” (Cambridge 1988); her latest book dealing with the Art of Syrian Revolution 2011 – 2016 is entitled Dancing in Damascus: Creativity, Resilience, and the Syrian Revolution [Routledge 2016].

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