Daughters of the Dust

Thu Jun 13 2024 at 07:00 pm

Berkeley Art Museum & Pacific Film Archive | Berkeley

Berkeley Art Museum & Pacific Film Archive
Publisher/HostBerkeley Art Museum & Pacific Film Archive
Daughters of the Dust
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“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,” explained director Julie Dash. On a summer day in 1902, the Peazant family prepares to leave their island home off the Georgia coast and leave a way of life to which there is no return. With authenticity in every detail—including the Gullah language, with its syntax and cadence retentive of West African influence—Dash tells her 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 creates her own cinematic codes, a challenge that faces all women filmmakers.
Presented in conjunction with A Movement in Every Direction: Legacies of the Great Migration
The film will be introduced by UC Berkeley Associate Professor, Nadia Ellis.
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Event Venue & Nearby Stays

Berkeley Art Museum & Pacific Film Archive, 2155 Center St,Berkeley,CA,United States

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