Unpacking the ArteArchive

ARCHIVE FEVER: WOMEN’S CINEMA FROM SOUTH WEST ASIA AND NORTH AFRICA

Expired February 14, 2022 4:59 AM
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South West Asia and North Africa, there are historical records of women’s cinema since the 1920s. However, a lack of state funding for archival projects, as well as factors such as conflict and war, mean that we often watch these films through reading about them. The films themselves are inaccessible, or more often damaged or lost. 


Feminist history is subversive, and often excluded from mainstream historiographies. Since the 1970s, many women have made films about archiving practice, or their own cultural histories which have been made absent from popular imagination. In more recent times, digital technology has become a mode of reconstructing stories in the absence of archival material, as well as a tool to undertake more ambitious restoration projects.


This film series includes a cult-classic from the archives, an essay film exploring the nature of archiving, and three experiments in transmission; celluloid, CGI and the mosalsalat. They are examples of imagining otherwise, in a region where feminist histories remain on the margins.


— Róisín Tapponi


Curated by Róisín Tapponi, the Founder of Habibi Collective, SHASHA Movies, ART WORK Magazine, and Independent Iraqi Film Festival (IIFF).


Co-presented by ArteEast and Anthology Film Archives, this series is part of the legacy program “Unpacking the ArteArchive,” which preserves and presents over 17 years of film and video programming by ArteEast. In addition to the in-person, theatrical screenings at Anthology, the series will be presented on artearchive.org from February 4 -13.


Online Film Program:

THE NOUBA WOMEN OF MOUNT CHENOUA, Assia Djebar, Algeria,1977, 115 min

GHARIBA, Meriem Bennani, Morocco/U.S., 2017, 19 min

A FEELING GREATER THAN LOVE, Mary Jirmanus Saba, Lebanon, 2017, 99 min

KHTOBTOGONE, Sara Sadik, France, 2021, 16 min



ARCHIVE FEVER: WOMEN’S CINEMA FROM SOUTH-WEST ASIA AND NORTH AFRICA will also be screening onsite at Anthology Film Archive (NYC):





For more info go to www.anthologyfilmarchives.org

THE NOUBA WOMEN OF MOUNT CHENOUA, Assia Djebar, Algeria,1977, 115 min

Arabic and French with English subtitles


“This classic film from acclaimed novelist and filmmaker Assia Djebar is essential viewing for an understanding of women in Algeria. Taking its title and structure from the ‘Nouba,’ a traditional song of five movements, this haunting film mingles narrative and documentary styles to document the creation of women’s personal and cultural histories. Returning to her native region 15 years after the end of the Algerian war, Lila is obsessed by memories of the war for independence that defined her childhood. In dialogue with other Algerian women, she reflects on the differences between her life and theirs. In lyrical footage she contemplates the power of grandmothers who pass down traditions of anti-colonial resistance to their heirs. Reading the history of the country as written in the stories of women’s lives, LA NOUBA is an engrossing portrait of speech and silence, memory and creation, and a tradition where the past and present coexist.” –WOMEN MAKE MOVIES



Bio: Assia Djebar (born Fatima-Zohra Imalhayen) was an Algerian writer and filmmaker. The author of numerous novels, collections of poetry, plays, short stories, and essays, and director of two critically acclaimed films, she was one of the most important literary and cultural figures of the Arab and Francophone worlds.

 

  • Year
    1977
  • Runtime
    115 minutes
  • Language
    Arabic, French
  • Country
    Algeria
  • Director
    Assia Djebar