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Videos |
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Please
refer to our Video
and DVD Use Guidelines if you
are interested in watching any of
the following videos.
- Commercial Videos and Documentaries
- Guest Speakers and Performances
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| 10
Days That Unexpectedly Changed
America |
2006 |
460 minutes |
1 |
DVD |
 |
More Information »
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| A
Cold Day in DC |
2005 |
80 minutes |
1 |
DVD |
 |
More Information » |
|
| A
Day Without A Mexican |
2004 |
98 minutes |
1 |
DVD/VHS |
 |
More Information »
|
California wakes up and all 14 million Latinos have disappeared mysteriously except for Lila Rodriguez. The Golden State is in shock. Could this be a UFO kidnapping? Or biological terrorism? Or an apocalypse and Latinos are the chosen ones? Or perhaps they just left because they were tired of being taken for granted. As time goes by, the State continues to deteriorate: Garbage has taken over the streets and tears are permanently painted on the faces of most citizens as the 5th largest economy in the world tumbles. The realization that what has disappeared is the very thing that keeps the California Dream running. Cooks, gardeners, policemen, nannies, doctors, farm and construction workers, entertainers, athletes, teachers as well as the largest growing market of consumers has turned Latinos and their return into the number one priority in the State. But as despair turns into quiet sorrow, deeply felt memories and heartfelt appreciation yield unexpected results. |
| Adelante Mujeres! |
1992 |
30 minutes |
1 |
VHS |
|
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| Advertising Missionaries |
1996 |
52 minutes |
1 |
DVD |
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| After Stonewall |
1999 |
88 minutes |
1 |
DVD |
 |
|
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| America
Beyond the Color Line - PBS
Home Video |
2003 |
220 minutes |
1 |
DVD |
 |
More Information » |
One hundred years ago, the celebrated African-American intellectual, W.E.B. DuBois, identified the problem of the 20th century as "the problem of the color line." America has come a long way since this prophecy was made, and the politics of race have undergone dramatic change. So what - a century later - are the new challenges faced by black Americans? For Gates, this is both the best and the worst of times. Black Americans are center stage in almost every arena, and opportunities have opened up that just three decades ago seemed unimaginable. But huge obstacles remain: many African Americans say they still feel excluded from mainstream American life and a fifth of all black Americans currently live below the poverty line. |
| American
Experience: The Murder of Emmett
Till |
2003 |
60 minutes |
1 |
DVD |
 |
More Information » |
In August 1955, a fourteen-year-old black boy whistled at a white woman in a grocery store in Money, Mississippi. Emmett Till, a teen from Chicago, didn’t understand that he had broken the unwritten laws of the Jim Crow South until three days later when two white men dragged him from his bed in the dead of night, beat him brutally and then shot him in the head. Although his killers were arrested and charged with murder, they were both quickly acquitted by an all-white, all-male jury. Shortly afterwards, the defendants sold their story, including a detailed account of how they murdered Till, to a journalist. The murder and the trial horrified the nation and the world. Till’s death was a spark that helped mobilize the civil rights movement. Three months after his body was pulled from the Tallahatchie River, the Montgomery bus boycott began. |
| American Ramadan |
2006 |
60 minutes |
1 |
DVD |
|
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American
Tongues-
CNAM Film Library
|
1987 |
56 minutes |
1 |
DVD |
|
More Information » |
American Tongues explores the impact of linguistic attitudes in an exciting manner. Anybody who lives in the U.S. knows the cliches about how people in the various parts of the country handle the English language. Southerners talk too slowly. New Yorkers are rude. New Englanders don't say much at all. |
| An
Inconvenient Truth |
2006 |
96 minutes |
1 |
DVD |
 |
More Information » |
|
| Anti-Semitism
in the 21st Century |
2007 |
60 minutes |
1 |
DVD |
 |
More Information » |
|
| Assault
on the Spirit - Race, Sex, and
Religion at Miami University |
1998 |
37 minutes |
1 |
VHS |
|
|
Students who may be considered minorities at Miami University in Oxford, Ohio recount their experiences at the campus. They discuss the level of diversity, acceptance, discrimination, ignorance and even threats brought about because they are of a different race, religion or sexual orientation. As one student insightfully notes, "There is not blatant racism; there is not blatant homophobia. What is here is the worst of its kind. It is subtle. People will look at you and say, 'I am not racist!' but they'll be thinking it the whole time." |
| Babakiueria |
1986 |
30 minutes |
1 |
VHS |
|
More Information » |
This video filmed in Australia is a satire where the roles of blacks and whites have been reversed. Imagine what it would be like if a fleet of black settlers arrived to colonize an area inhabited by white natives. Many valid points are posed for the viewer concerning racial/ethnic assumptions and relations as well as the incongruities of contemporary society. |
Before
Stonewall
|
1985 |
87 minutes |
1 |
DVD |
 |
More Information » |
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| Beyond
Brown: Pursuing the Promise |
2004 |
60 minutes |
1 |
DVD |
|
More Information » |
On May 17, 1954, in its decision in Brown v. Board of Education, Topeka, Kansas, the U.S. Supreme Court struck down the doctrine of “separate but equal,” ending legal segregation in America. Fifty years later, the full promise of Brown v. Board of Education has yet to be fulfilled.
To mark the 50th anniversary of Brown, Emmy-winning director Stanley Nelson’s Firelight Media undertakes one of the most comprehensive explorations of the legacy and impact of Brown, arguably the most important Supreme Court case of the 20th Century. |
| Bombay |
1995 |
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1 |
DVD |
 |
More Information » |
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| Bugs
for Breakfast |
2001 |
19 minutes |
1 |
DVD |
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A multi-cultural look at how we eat. Don't worry, we don't show people eating bugs. We want to challenge viewer's minds, not their stomachs. Explore basic questions such as why do people eat, why do we eat meat, what food taboos do you practice, what do people on the other side of the globe eat, why don't guys go out for soup and salad, what determines how you eat, and how does your culture influence your diet? |
Capoeira:
Techniques
3 DVD set:
Basic
Techniques Rodas
de Capoeira
|
2005 |
90 minutes,
100 minutes,
85 minutes |
1 |
DVD |
 |
|
Between martial art and dance, Capoeira has a wide range of blows and acrobatics. Learn how to master the basic techniques like Ginga, kicks, cartwheels, dogdes, blocks, feints, and many more typica movements with the group Capoeira Brasil and master Paulinho SBIA.
Enter thr Roda (circle) and let yourself be guided by the dibolic and sensual rhythms of Brazil. Based in Rio de Janiero, the group Capoeira Brasil was founded in 1989. Today it is one of the most famous in Brazil. It is present inthe whole world and has a reputation of great acrobatic and spectacular rodas of a high technical level. |
| Children
of the Camps: Japanese Americans
During World War II |
1999 |
55 minutes |
3 |
VHS |
|
More Information » |
Children of the Camps is a powerful documentary which shares the experiences, cultural and familial issues, and the long internalized grief and shame felt by six Japanese Americans who were only children when incarcerated in concentration camps during World War II. Subsequent to the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, President Franklin D. Roosevelt issued Executive Order 9066, on February 19, 1942. This led to the mass evacuation and incarceration of 120,000 Americans of Japanese descent, more than half of whom were children. They were interned in 10 camps scattered throughout remote and desolate areas of the U.S.
This video program is the result of a three-year long project by Dr. Satsuki Ina, a university professor and family therapist who has been conducting a series of three-day workshops for over ten years for other former fellow internees. With the expertise of a group of community-conscious filmmakers, including the Emmy Award winning director, Stephen Holsapple, she was able to capture a workshop on film in order to share the profound and proven healing experience with other Japanese Americans and the greater community at large. Unlike any other internment film, Children of the Camps examines how this early trauma manifests itself in their adult lives. |
Citizen
King-
PBS Home Video |
2004 |
120 minutes |
1 |
DVD |
 |
More Information » |
Citizen King explores the last five years in Martin Luther King's life by drawing on the personal recollections and eyewitness accounts of friends, movement associates, journalists, law enforcement officers, and historians, to illuminate this little-known chapter in the story of America's most important and influential moral leader. The story begins on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial in August 1963, when a 34-year-old preacher galvanized millions with his dream for an America free of racism. It comes to a bloody end almost five years later, on a motel balcony in Memphis, Tennessee. |
| The
Color of Fear |
1994 |
90 minutes |
1 |
VHS |
 |
More Information » |
The Color of Fear is a film about the pain and anguish that racism has caused in the lives of eight North American men of Asian, European, Latino, and African descent. Out of their confrontations and struggles to understand and trust each other emerges an emotional and insightful portrayal into the type of dialogue most of us fear, but hope will happen sometime in our lifetime. |
| The
Corporation |
2004 |
145 minutes |
1 |
DVD |
 |
More Information » |
One hundred and fifty years ago, the corporation was a relatively insignificant entity. Today, it is a vivid, dramatic and pervasive presence in all our lives. Like the Church, the Monarchy and the Communist Party in other times and places, the corporation is today’s dominant institution. But history humbles dominant institutions. All have been crushed, belittled or absorbed into some new order. The corporation is unlikely to be the first to defy history. In this complex and highly entertaining documentary, Mark Achbar, co-director of the influential and inventive MANUFACTURING CONSENT: NOAM CHOMSKY AND THE MEDIA, teams up with co-director Jennifer Abbott and writer Joel Bakan to examine the far-reaching repercussions of the corporation’s increasing preeminence. Based on Bakan’s book The Corporation: The Pathological Pursuit of Profit and Power, the film is a timely, critical inquiry that invites CEOs, whistle-blowers, brokers, gurus, spies, players, pawns and pundits on a graphic and engaging quest to reveal the 4corporation’s inner workings, curious history, controversial impacts and possible futures. Featuring illuminating interviews with Noam Chomsky, Michael Moore, Howard Zinn and many others, THE CORPORATION charts the spectacular rise of an institution aimed at achieving specific economic goals as it also recounts victories against this apparently invincible force. |
| Crash |
2004 |
122 minutes |
1 |
DVD |
 |
|
This compelling urban thriller tracks the volatile interscetion of a multiethnic cast of characters struggling to overcome their fears as they careen in and out of one another's lives. In the gray area between black and white, victim and agressor, during the next 36 hours, they will all collide. |
| Cross-Cultural
Comparisons: Gender Roles |
2004 |
36 minutes |
1 |
DVD |
|
|
This set compares gender roles in several countries. It discusses Hindu, Chinese, and Islamic gender roles, examining cultural practices that give men authority. The set also focuses on societies that have tried to remedy gender inequalities with specific policies and laws. |
| Dangerous
Living: Coming Out in the Developing
World |
2003 |
60 minutes |
1 |
DVD |
 |
More Information » |
|
| Daughter
of Keltoum |
2001 |
101 minutes |
1 |
DVD |
 |
More Information » |
|
| The
Devil's Miner |
2005 |
82 minutes |
1 |
DVD |
 |
More Information » |
|
| Dirty
Pretty Things |
2002 |
97 minutes |
1 |
DVD |
 |
More Information » |
|
Discovery
Channel - A Question of Race
2 tape set |
2001 |
51 minutes |
1 |
VHS |
|
|
Help students better understand the complex subject of race: where it comes from, what it means in our society and how it affects our relationships. This set includes two videos. |
Do
You Speak American?-
FMG Home Video - 3 videos
|
2005 |
57 minutes each |
1 |
VHS |
 |
More Information » |
Writer Robert MacNeil travels across the country to answer questions why Maine lobstermen sound so different from Texas cowboys? Will Spanish ever become the dominant language of America? And how is English linked to issues of race, gender, and class? MacNeil examines the dynamic state of American English, a language rich in regional variety, strong in global impact, and steeped in cultural controversy. |
| El
Norte |
1984 |
141 minutes |
1 |
DVD |
 |
More Information » |
|
| Everybody's
Ethnic |
2001 |
21 minutes |
1 |
DVD |
|
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Culture is like eye color. Your eye color is obvious to anyone who sees you, but you cannot see the color of your own eyes without some kind of reflection. Everybody's Ethnic helps viewers hold a mirror to their own culture. Discover yourself by exploring other cultures. |
Face:
A Portrait
Forward Face |
1999 |
28 Minutes |
1 |
VHS |
|
More Information » |
|
| Fidel
Castro - PBS Home Video |
2005 |
120 minutes |
1 |
DVD |
 |
More Information » |
Fidel Castro is two-hour documentary from American Experience on the controversial, charismatic dictator who has confounded American presidents from Eisenhower to Bush, while surviving a CIA-backed invasion, countless assassination plots, an economic embargo -- even the collapse of his benefactor, the Soviet Union. People from all walks of life either despise Fidel Castro as a ruthless dictator or lionize him as a champion of social justice. Nearly five decades after he assumed power, he remains a living legend, a touchstone for revolutionaries the world over, and a symbol of resistance to American dominance. |
| First
Comes Love, Then Comes Marriage |
1999 |
53 minutes |
1 |
VHS |
|
|
When people form a community, how do they develop the guidelines, at once unique and yet universal?”for satisfying their needs as individuals, families, and entire societies? This engaging five-part series provides a sociological overview of the cultural conventions surrounding gender, love, and death and the ways in which they fuel the fundamental institutions of marriage and family. 5-part series, 53 minutes each. |
| Food:
A Multicultural Feast |
1998 |
20 minutes |
1 |
DVD |
|
|
One result of increased global trade and travel is that we all have multi-cultural stomachs. This video examines the multi-cultural origins of many foods and unearths a few surprises.
Viewers learn chili isn't Mexican, spaghetti and meatballs is uniquely American, chop suey doesn't exist in China, and sauerkraut was a Chinese invention. They also learn that food serves as a common bond between peoples. If we can enjoy each other's foods, can't we at least live together in peace? |
| For the Bible Tells Me So |
2007 |
98 minutes |
1 |
DVD |
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| Freedom
On My Mind |
1994 |
110 minutes |
1 |
VHS |
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This documentary covers the events surrounding the Mississippi Voter Registration Project during the Civil Rights Movement of the early 1960s. Combining archival footage with contemporary interviews, it conveys the human dimensions of this early struggle against racial fear, ignorance and class conflict. In Mississippi, and in varying degrees, throughout the American South, blacks were routinely subjected to racial violence and denied common basic rights. The most basic civil right denied them was the right to vote. Freedom on My Mind begins with the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee's voter registration drive in 1961. As organizers and local black citizens began to confront the system, they were met with jail, beatings and even murder for the pursuit of their right to vote.
By 1964, organizers feared for their lives. Hoping to attract the attention of the nation and the federal government, they recruited mostly white college students to join them in what would be called Freedom Summer. In spite of racial, class and cultural differences among the organizers themselves, the drive registered more than 80,000 voters. However, when the Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party sent a delegation to the 1964 Democratic Convention, they found that the national political parties were not ready to give them their full support. Freedom Summer had garnered the attention of the national media, though, and put a spotlight on the South. In the end, this activism helped transform political power in the South by directly leading to the passage of the Voting Rights Act of 1965. |
| The Ground Truth |
2006 |
78 minutes |
1 |
DVD |
 |
More Information » |
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| Hollow City |
2004 |
88 minutes |
1 |
DVD |
 |
More Information » |
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| Integration with Dignity |
|
25 minutes |
1 |
VHS |
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| In
Remembrance of Martin |
1986 |
60 minutes |
1 |
DVD |
 |
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A moving documentary honoring Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., including personal comments from Coretta Scott King, Rev. Ralph Abernathy, Julian Bond, Jimmy Carter, Bishop Desmond Tutu and others who discuss the extraordinary life and works of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Includes King's; "I Have a Dream" address. |
| La Sierra |
2005 |
84 minutes |
1 |
VHS |
 |
More Information » |
|
| The Intolerable Burden |
2003 |
56 minutes |
1 |
VHS |
|
More Information » |
In the autumn of 1965, sharecroppers Mae Bertha and Matthew Carter enrolled the youngest eight of their thirteen children in the public schools of Drew Mississippi. Their decision to send the children to the formerly all white schools was a response to a “freedom of choice” plan. The plan was designed by the Drew school board to place the district in compliance with the Civil Rights Act of 1964, essential since without compliance, the district would no longer be eligible for financial support from the Federal government. Blacks were not expected to choose white schools. This proved true for all but the Carters.
The Intolerable Burden places the Carters’ commitment to obtaining a quality education in context, by examining the conditions of segregation prior to 1965, the hardships the family faced during desegregation, and the massive white resistance, which led to resegregation. While the town of Drew is geographically isolated, the patterns of segregation, desegregation, and resegregation are increasingly apparent throughout public education systems in the United States. |
| Letters from Mississippi
- The Freedom Summer Scholars |
2004 |
|
1 |
DVD |
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| Maria
Full of Grace |
2004 |
101 minutes |
1 |
DVD |
 |
More Information » |
|
| Mississippi America |
1998 |
60 minutes |
1 |
VHS |
|
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Narrated by actors Ossie Davis and Ruby Dee, Mississippi, America, documents an important chapter in the history of civil rights in the United States. Using archival footage and on-camera interviews, the film tells the story of how a coalition of civil rights organizations and thousands of black and white Americans, including attorneys from the National Lawyers Guild (NLG), joined forces during the summer of 1964-Freedom Summer-to assist blacks in Mississippi in their fight for the right to register to vote.
This program gives testimony to persistence and courage in the face of oppression, as citizens and the lawyers who volunteered to help them confront life-threatening violence and government repression in order to win the right to vote. Furthermore, Mississippi America documents the larger struggle for social equality that is still being waged today.
That summer’s challenge to Mississippi’s legal and political system reflected a growing national commitment to the application of the right to vote for all Americans, resulting in the passage of the Voting Rights Act in 1965. It paved the way for the mainstream legal community’s interest in civil rights and opened the doors for widespread politic |
| Modern
Slavery - Free The Slaves |
2004 |
10 minutes |
1 |
VHS |
|
More Information » |
This short video features stories from Slavery: A Global Investigation, and is an effective tool for raising awareness about modern slavery. |
| Moving
Toward Community - The Diversity
Initiative at the University of
Maryland at College Park |
2004 |
7 minutes |
1 |
VHS |
|
|
The pursuit of diversity on the College Park campus began during the 1960s and 70s as an effort to end discrimination against African Americans. Over the course of several decades the University has taken a number of measures designed to increase the representation within its student body and campus workforce of women and members of other historically underrepresented or excluded groups. During this period the University's interest in diversity has broadened to include a wide range of factors that affect the quality of the workplace environment and the institution's overall educational effectiveness. Some diversity-related initiatives have been undertaken in order to comply with state and federal laws or directives, while others reflect the conviction that providing students with a high-quality education requires a curriculum, faculty, staff, and student body broadly representative of the larger society. |
| Murder
In Mississippi - The Price of
Freedom |
1994 |
52 minutes |
1 |
DVD/VHS |
|
More Information » |
Thirty years after “Freedom Summer” in Mississippi, this ABC News Turning Point program retraces the dramatic events of that summer, and examines how the murders of three young men by the Ku Klux Klan shocked the nation and changed the course of the civil rights movement. The program recounts the events leading to the presence, and then the murder of Chaney, Goodman, and Schwerner and explores the volatile atmosphere following the discovery of their bodies; the reaction nationwide to their deaths; and the long process involved in seeking justice in a place where segregation was part of the state constitution and violence against blacks was common. When the river was dragged for the missing civil rights workers, nine bodies were found of black men who had been lynched. As one of the volunteers wrote home at the time, “Dear Mom and Dad…Finally people have become concerned, but it is really a judgment on us all that it did not happen until northern white boys were involved.” |
| My
Big Fat Greek Wedding |
2002 |
95 minutes |
1 |
VHS |
 |
More Information » |
Toula is 30. And unmarried. Which means as a nice Greek girl – she’s a failure. All her cousins did the right thing – married Greek boys and made Greek babies. So everyone worries: what will become of Toula?
Then one day she sees the ultimate unattainable guy and realizes the only way her life will get better is if she gets away from her big, fat, Greek family. Toula escapes from the family restaurant. She exchanges her seating hostess jacket for a college diploma, convinces her aunt to give her a new job, and trades in her coke-bottle glasses for contact lenses, just in time for “him” to walk back into her life.
Ian Miller is tall, handsome but definitely not Greek. Their courtship is an Olympian culture clash. Can Ian handle Toula, her parents, her aunts, uncles, cousins and several centuries of Greek heritage? Will Toula discover the love she’s been missing right in the heart of her big, fat family?
One thing is for sure, for better or worse, for richer or poorer, with Ian’s proposal Toula is headed for her big, fat, Greek wedding. |
| Now
With Bill Moyers - Bob Moses &
The Algebra Project |
2002 |
60 minutes |
1 |
VHS |
|
More Information » |
Bill Moyers, one of the most recognized and respected journalists in America whose award-winning, ground-breaking documentaries have distinguished PBS programming, anchors this news program. NOW with Bill Moyers includes documentary reporting, in-depth one-on-one interviews and articulate commentary offering viewers relevant and diverse perspectives on the events, issues and ideas that are shaping their world. It draws on the editorial resources and journalistic strength of NPR News to tap public broadcasting’s greatest talents.
This series explores the “whys” behind timely top stories. The mix of segments vary to feature diverse perspectives on stories reported from across the country and around the world, as well as interviews with informed and original thinkers. It probes what is strong and what is wrong America, who is winning and who is losing in the body politic. |
| Oaxacan
Hoops |
2005 |
28 minutes |
1 |
VHS |
|
More Information » |
|
| Osama |
2003 |
83 minutes |
1 |
DVD |
 |
More Information » |
Inspired by a true story, this Golden Globe-winning drama is the first film made in Afghanistan after the fall of the Taliban. Hailed by critics as “stunning” (Entertainment Weekly), “breathtaking” (Slant), and “emotionally charged” (Screen International), Osama is “a striking work of cinematic art” (LA Daily News).
After the brutal Taliban regime bans women from working and forbids them to leave their homes without a male escort, a 12-year-old girl and her mother find themselves on the brink of starvation. With nowhere left to turn, the mother disguises her daughter as a boy. Now called “Osama,” the young girl embarks on a terrifying and confusing journey, as she tries to keep the Taliban from discovering her true identity. |
| Our House |
2000 |
56 minutes |
1 |
DVD |
|
|
|
| People
Like Us- Social Class in America |
2001 |
124 minutes |
1 |
VHS |
|
More Information » |
Social Class. It’s the 800-pound gorilla in American life that most Americans don’t think about: how do income, family background, education, attitudes, aspirations, and even appearance mark someone as a member of a particular social class.
People Like Us shows how social class plays a role in the lives of all Americans, whether they live in Park Avenue penthouses, Appalachian trailer parks, bayou houseboats or suburban gated communities. The documentary travels across the country presenting stories that will resonate with viewers regardless of where they see themselves on the social spectrum – stories of family traditions, class mobility, and different lifestyle choices. An exciting cast of characters and commentators help make the connections between daily life and the larger issues of class in America. |
| The Quilts of Gee's Bend |
2006 |
28 minutes |
1 |
DVD |
 |
|
|
| The
Quiltmakers of Gee's Band |
2004 |
60 minutes |
1 |
DVD |
 |
More Information » |
|
| Race:
The Power of an Illusion Part
I- The Difference Between Us |
2003 |
58 minutes |
1 |
VHS |
|
More Information » |
|
| Race:
The Power of an Illusion Part
II- The Story We Tell |
2003 |
56 minutes |
1 |
VHS |
|
More Information » |
|
| Race:
The Power of an Illusion Part
III- The House We Live In |
2003 |
56 minutes |
1 |
VHS |
|
More Information » |
|
Race
: The Power of Illusion Parts
1, 2, & 3 MISSING- If found, please
return to 105 MacMillan Hall |
2003 |
56 minutes each |
1 |
DVD |
|
More Information » |
|
| Real
Women Have Curves |
2002 |
86 minutes |
1 |
DVD |
 |
|
Should she leave home, go to college and experience life? Or stay home, get married, and keep working in her sister’s struggling garment factory? It may seem like an easy decision, but for 18 year-old Ana, every choice she makes this summer will change her life. At home, she is bound to a mother who wants her to become someone she is not. But at school, she’s encouraged by a teacher who sees her potential, and adored by a boyfriend who loves her for who she is. Right now, Ana may be making clothes for less shapely women. But she’s about to discover that real women take chances, have flaws, embrace life, and above all, have curves! |
Religions
of the World - Schlessinger
Media
6 disc set
|
2003 |
50 minutes each |
1 |
DVD |
|
|
Transcends into a world where spiritual beliefs know no limits. It takes the viewers to exotic locations around the world and to see how such religions as Buddhism, Hinduism, Islam, Judaism, Protestantism and Catholicism have shaped cultures, changed history and left their mark on humanity. Learn fascinating facts about the striking similarities and differences. Explore what makes up the core of our very existence. |
| Saving Face |
2005 |
97 minutes |
1 |
DVD |
|
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| Seoul
Train |
2006 |
54 minutes |
1 |
DVD |
 |
More Information » |
|
Shoah
New Yorker Video -4 disc set
|
1985 |
566 minutes |
1 |
DVD |
 |
|
This is a nine-and-a-half-hour film that talks with survivors, SS men, and those who witnessed the extermination of 6 million Jews. It tells the story of the most horrifying event of the 20th century. The director Claude Lanzmann spends 11 years tracking people down, cajoling them to talk, asking them questions they didn't want to face. When soldiers refuse to appear on film, Lanzmann sneaks cameras in. When people are on the verge of breaking down and can't answer any more questions, Lanzmann asks anyway. He gives names to the victims--driving through a town that was predominantly Jewish before Hitler's time, a local points out which Jews owned what. Lanzmann travels the world, speaking to workers in Poland, survivors in Israel, officers in Germany. He is not a detached interviewer; his probing is deeply personal. |
| Skin
Deep |
1989 |
93 minutes |
1 |
VHS |
|
More Information » |
Filmmaker Frances Reid follows a diverse group of students from the University of Massachusetts, Texas A & M, Chico State and U.C. Berkeley as they participate in an intensive three-day racial awareness workshop in northern California. In the documentary the students interact in group sessions that challenge deeply held attitudes about race. It also accompanies the participants back to their respective campuses and to their homes in an attempt to understand why they think the way they do. The students enter into heated discussions about self-segregation on campus, discrimination, affirmative action and students' responsibility. Eventually, the students learn to listen to each other and to take the first steps toward building community |
| Slavery:
A Global Investigation Free The
Slaves |
2004 |
80 minutes |
1 |
VHS |
|
More Information » |
This 80-minute documentary, based on the book Disposable People, exposes cases of slavery in the rug-making sector of Northwest India, the cocoa plantations in the Ivory Coast, and even the homes of World Bank officials in Washington, D.C. Filmed in India, Brazil, West Africa, London, and the US, the documentary shows how slavery fits into the global economy. The filmmakers actually buy slaves in Africa and help to free child slaves in India. |
Slavery
and the Making of America - PBS Video, 4 part |
2004 |
60 minutes each |
1 |
DVD |
|
More Information » |
This groundbreaking 4-part documentary presents a rich, detailed look at the institution itself, a national practice which helped transform tiny colonies into the world's strongest nation. The program asserts that U.S. slavery gradually evolved from a loosely defined labor system, under which Africans and their descendants retained legal and property rights, into the tight |
| Social
Class |
1991 |
30 minutes |
1 |
VHS |
|
|
Explores social class in the United States by focusing on two teenage girls from different classes. Shows how social class is reflected in their lifestyles and how they look at the world. Shows their life chances, asking the question if social stratification in the United States is inherently discriminatory. |
| Southern Poverty Law Center |
|
|
1 |
VHS |
|
|
|
| The
Suitors |
1988 |
106 minutes |
1 |
DVD |
 |
More Information » |
|
| Sustainable Table |
2005 |
52 minutes |
1 |
DVD |
|
|
|
| The
Take |
2004 |
87 minutes |
1 |
DVD |
 |
More Information » |
|
| Talking
About Race - Part I |
1999 |
25 minutes |
3 |
VHS |
|
|
One of the most important conversations which can take place on a college campus today is an open, honest discussion about race and ethnicity. This discussion is also one of the most difficult. The concepts of “Political Correctness” and “Reverse Discrimination” have built barriers between our students and have discouraged young people from listening to and learning from one another. Talking About Race breaks through those barriers and leads students to open, honest dialogue. The tapes focus on the single most important factor in understanding differences, the individual perspective. The Talking About Race videotapes are specifically designed to open up discussion by showing us real students talking about real issues. The words are their own but their thoughts are shared by many of their peers across the nation.
The tapes and accompanying facilitation guide are designed to provide you with a vehicle to help facilitate meaningful discussion on your campus. Although the subjects of the films are college students, the films can be used with a variety of audiences. |
| Talking
About Race - Part II |
1999 |
25 minutes |
3 |
VHS |
|
|
|
| Throw
Away Teens |
1999 |
27 minutes |
1 |
VHS |
|
|
From an ABC "20/20" news documentary aired September 13, 1999, here is the emotional and haunting story of homeless gay and lesbian teenagers, nearly 63,000 of them every year, as told in three interviews by Connie Chung and her co-anchor Jack Ford. As you read these heartbreaking interviews, ask yourself the question, Does the Christian Church bear any of the responsibility for their plight? |
| Tijuana
Jews |
2005 |
52 minutes |
1 |
DVD |
|
More Information » |
|
| TransAmerica |
2005 |
104 minutes |
1 |
DVD |
 |
More Information » |
|
| Uniform |
2003 |
92 minutes |
1 |
DVD |
 |
More Information » |
|
| Viva
La Causa, 500 years of Chicano
History - Part I |
1995 |
30 minutes |
1 |
VHS |
|
More Information » |
Viva La Causa, 500 years of Chicano History, a 2-part educational video in English, offers a compelling introduction to the history of Mexican American people. Based on the book 500 Years of Chicano History in Pictures edited by Elizabeth Martinez. The video is suitable for youth in grades 5-12 and up, as well as community gatherings.
PART ONE of the video depicts Mexican Americans from their pre-Columbian origins through Spanish colonization, the U.S. take over of today’s Southwest in 1848, the people’s resistance, workers creating great wealth, and their massive strikes, up to World War II.
PART TWO includes the 1943 “Zoot Suit Riots,” and early efforts to fight discrimination, the farm workers’ struggle, student protests, the Chicano Moratorium against the U.S. war in Vietnam, and new Chicano art. Today’s Latino struggles bring the video up to date.
Viva La Causa, 500 years of Chicano History is a unique, inspiring tool for everyone to learn about one of our oldest yet least known peoples. |
| Viva
La Causa, 500 years of Chicano
History - Part II |
1995 |
30 minutes |
1 |
VHS |
|
More Information » |
Viva La Causa, 500 years of Chicano History, a 2-part educational video in English, offers a compelling introduction to the history of Mexican American people. Based on the book 500 Years of Chicano History in Pictures edited by Elizabeth Martinez. The video is suitable for youth in grades 5-12 and up, as well as community gatherings.
PART ONE of the video depicts Mexican Americans from their pre-Columbian origins through Spanish colonization, the U.S. take over of today’s Southwest in 1848, the people’s resistance, workers creating great wealth, and their massive strikes, up to World War II.
PART TWO includes the 1943 “Zoot Suit Riots,” and early efforts to fight discrimination, the farm workers’ struggle, student protests, the Chicano Moratorium against the U.S. war in Vietnam, and new Chicano art. Today’s Latino struggles bring the video up to date.
Viva La Causa, 500 years of Chicano History is a unique, inspiring tool for everyone to learn about one of our oldest yet least known peoples. |
| Voices
of Civil Rights |
2006 |
270 minutes |
1 |
DVD |
 |
More Information » |
|
| The
Way Home |
2002 |
92 minutes |
1 |
VHS |
 |
More Information » |
This is the story of a spoiled 7-year-old city boy, "Sang-wu", and his mute grandmother, who has spent her whole life in a small rural village. Forced to stay with his grandmother while his mother looks for work, Sang-wu learns about the ups and downs of life. Being a city brat, he's used to the benefits and luxuries of Seoul. When he realizes that there are no batteries for his toys, only rocks to play with, he torments his grandmother - whining and demanding things she can't provide, but she never reprimands him for his behavior. Instead she gives him unconditional love and he gradually learns how to appreciate the simple pleasures of living. |
| What's
Cooking |
2000 |
109 Minutes |
1 |
DVD |
 |
More Information » |
|
| title |
date |
duration |
number |
format |
photos |
url |
description |
| Affirmative Action Discussion |
October 30, 2003 |
120 minutes |
2 |
VHS |
|
|
|
| Appiah, Dr. K. Anthony -
Making A Life |
January 2004 |
90 minutes |
1 |
VHS |
|
More Information » |
|
Artenstein, Isaac-
Tijuana Jews & the Mexican
Jewish Experience
|
September 19, 2006 |
120 minutes |
1 |
DVD/VHS |
|
More Information » |
|
Asante, Molefi |
October 27, 2005 |
90 minutes |
1 |
VHS |
|
More Information » |
|
Aslan,
Reza -
"The Future of
Islam"
|
November 16, 2006 |
120 Minutes |
1 |
DVD/VHS |
|
More Information » |
|
| Baldwin, Daryl |
November 30, 2005 |
80 Minutes |
1 |
VHS |
|
More Information » |
|
Bales, Kevin -
"Ending
Slavery" |
August
30, 3007 |
80 Minutes |
2 |
DVD |
|
More Information » |
|
| Blakey, Michael |
January 25, 2007 |
120 minutes |
1 |
DVD/VHS |
|
More Information » |
|
| Beckham,
Edgar |
January 14, 2002 |
55 minutes |
3 |
VHS |
|
More Information » |
In January 2003, Dr. Edgar Beckham, one of the leading educators on the diversity initiative in the country, spoke to professors and students at Miami University on "The Campus Diversity Agenda for the Twenty-First Century." He explores this often controversial topic by speaking of the various explanations for the need of diversity, and how people of different races and backgrounds often view diversity in dissimilar ways. Beckham believes that even the concept of diversity can help to spawn discourse, which can ultimately help to break down the barriers of structural racism. He argues that the teaching of diversity, both to the advantaged and disadvantaged, is the most effective resource we have to learn to live in a world in conflict with others, where it is valued to be both different and the same. Beckham asserts that by replacing deficits with constructions of meanings that serve as assets to understanding, we will be able to help build our democracy. |
| Bowen, William |
February 15, 2001 |
135 minutes |
2 |
VHS |
|
More Information » |
|
Bussgang, Drs. Julian and
Fay Vogel-
Holocaust Awareness Program
- Polish
Jews Then and Now: Children
of the Holocaust Speak |
April
18, 2006 |
80 minutes |
1 |
VHS |
|
More Information » |
|
Clarke, Kamari Maxine-
Global Justice, Local Justice |
September 14, 2006 |
120 minutes |
1 |
VHS |
|
More Information » |
|
Cruz,
Teddy -
"Border Urbanism:
Strategies of Surveillance, Tactics
of Encroachment" |
September 28, 2006 |
120 Minutes |
1 |
DVD/VHS |
|
More Information » |
|
De Soto, Hernando -
A House
Is More than a Home |
September 13, 2004 |
90 minutes |
1 |
VHS |
|
More Information » |
|
Diversity, Inc.-
Women of Color Round Table 2006 |
2006 |
44 minutes |
1 |
DVD |
|
More Information » |
|
| Farmer, Paul |
April 24, 2007 |
80 minutes |
1 |
DVD/VHS |
|
More Information » |
|
| Ferris, James |
January 27, 2006 |
80 Minutes |
1 |
VHS |
|
More Information » |
|
| Fishkin, Shelley Fisher |
October 25, 2001 |
68 minutes |
2 |
VHS |
|
More Information » |
|
| García,
Cristina |
Fall 2003 |
68 minutes |
1 |
VHS |
|
More Information » |
"Beyond the Hyphen: Identity in the Age of Multiculturalism"
In the fall of 2003, Cristina García, author of such critically acclaimed books as Dreaming in Cuban and Monkey Hunting, gave a lecture at Miami University entitiled "Beyond the Hyphen: Identity in the Age of Multiculturalism." Although the narratives of her novels are different (the former explores the displacement of personal and cultural identity of Cubans in the U.S., while the latter details the life of a Chinese man settled in Cuba) there are similar themes that connect all of Garcías' works, such as migratory drifitng, displacement, centrality of place, real and imagined communities, and intergenerational relationships and conflicts.
In this thought-provoking lecture, García delves into the meanings of multiculturalism, and more specifically, the multiple uses of the "hyphen" to denote ethnicity. Does the hyphen symbolize both an attachement and permanant disconnection from European society around them? Or has it become a positive source of identity and a way to resist mono-culturalism? García notes that currently, many groups in the United States use the hyphen to reclaim their identity that was lost from European society. But what makes an Irish or Italian American different from an African, Latino, or Asian American? García answers these questions by exploring the history of multiculturalism, and how youth and "street" culture has actually helped to bridge the gap between races. She questions the effectiveness of multicultural education, and briefly explores the problems that minority groups still face in trying to overcome their feelings of displacement from dominant European culture. |
| Guinier,
Lani |
January 24, 2002 |
68 minutes |
1 |
VHS |
|
More Information » |
Lani Guinier speaks on using race as an asset, a diagnostic tool, signaling a greater problem affecting everyone. She puts women and people of color into her metaphor of the canary in the mines. Instead of pathologizing the canary, and attempting to quiet its cries by fitting a gas mask on it, the miners should heed its warning of the upcoming danger. She encourages people to take from the margin to rethink the whole because all destinies are tied together. She also expressed her view on the subject of affirmative action especially pertaining to education. She urges people to reconsider the way we determine who is qualified, or what we define as merit. She argues that the way in which we admit people to institutes of higher learning is unfair to not only people of other races, but to women and people from lower classes. She argues that we should do away with testocracy and the mission of universities is not to continue to produce affluent students but to promote leadership. |
Gross, Jan -
"Fear-Antisemitismin
Poland After Auschwitz" |
March 19, 2007 |
65 minutes |
1 |
DVD/VHS |
|
More Information » |
|
| Haddad,
Yvonne |
September 26, 2002 |
82 minutes |
3 |
VHS |
|
More Information » |
Yvonne Haddad, author of 16 books and Georgetown University professor of history of islam and christian/muslin relations, explores the issue of women in the Islamic world, and how our media has often wrongfully depicted them. She delves into the history of Islam's treatment of women, and argues that the encounter between cultures and the role of women is not a new phenomenon, but rather one that has a long history. She then discusses the role that 9/11 played in shaping our stereotypes of Muslim women, and argues that our government and society has declared a war on Islam, when it should be declaring a war on terrorism. Finally, she discusses the meaning of the veil, and how the Western world mistakenly views it as a symbol of oppression. |
| Hall, Kira |
March 2, 2006 |
80 Minutes |
1 |
VHS |
|
More Information » |
|
Hayden, Iola-
Founding Mothers Series - Comanche
Lives: A Conversation on Forty
Years of Commuity Activism |
April 10, 2006 |
80 minutes |
1 |
VHS |
|
More Information » |
|
Hodkingson,
Harold -
Lecture on the Changing
Demographics of the United States |
September 7, 2000 |
90 minutes |
2 |
VHS |
|
More Information » |
Harold Hodkingson, director of Educational Leadership in Washington D.C. and consultant for over 600 universities and a large number of corporations, gives his perspective on the changing demographics of the United States. In this absorbing lecture, Hodkingson discusses where different ethnicities are migrating to, and also, the mass movement of all ethnicities from the north to the south. He also focuses on why Ohio's population is declining, and why it is losing so many young people and is unable to attract families. Hodkingson also reveals how geographically segregated the country still is, despite efforts in the last few decades to diversify the population. He does argue that our country needs to redefine race as social and cultural, and avoid supporting it on scientific grounds. He urges Americans to look at poverty, which touches every ethnicity but certainly affects some more than others, as the greatest social handicap. |
HuDehart,
Evelyn - "The Asian Diaspora
in Latin America" |
October 19, 2006 |
120 Minutes |
1 |
DVD/VHS |
|
More Information » |
http://research.brown.edu/pdf/10088.pdf |
Integrating Arts and the
Curriculum-
Faculty Learning Community,
Miami University |
|
|
1 |
Instructional CD |
|
|
|
| Kernodle, Tammy |
November 6, 2007 |
59 minutes |
1 |
DVD |
|
More Information » |
|
| LaDousa, Chaise |
February 24, 2006 |
80 Minutes |
1 |
VHS |
|
More Information » |
|
| Lakoff, Robin |
August 31, 2005 |
|
1 |
VHS |
|
More Information » |
|
| Leap, William |
January 18, 2007 |
120 minutes |
1 |
DVD/VHS |
|
More Information » |
|
Leftwich, William -
Discussion
on Race |
October 4, 2001 |
120 minutes |
4 |
VHS |
|
More Information » |
|
| Lerner, Jeffrey |
February 14, 2006 |
60 Minutes |
1 |
VHS |
|
More Information » |
|
| Lewis, David Levering |
March 11, 2004 |
|
1 |
VHS |
|
More Information » |
|
| McCoy,
Ruth |
April 19, 2001 |
70 minutes |
1 |
VHS |
|
More Information » |
Racial Identity Issues in Transracial Adoptive Families
In 2001, Ruth McCoy, teaching professor and director of the Center for Social Work at the University of Texas, came to speak to Miami University students about the controversial topic of transracial adoption. Having worked for an adoption agency, she is extremely aware of the struggles that families face when adopting a child from a different country or of a different ethnicity. Although she acknowledges that transracial adoption has been treated with far more acceptance than it was a few decades ago, she reveals that there is still a multitude of struggles that adopting families must face, such as coping with racism and understanding the significance of racism. In her lecture, she emphasizes that families who adopt must be aware if the unique issues that these children have, and to raise them so that they are aware of both their racial and adoptive identity. |
| Malcomson,
Scott |
September 6, 2001 |
65 minutes |
2 |
VHS |
|
More Information » |
In "One Drop of Blood: The American Misadventure of Race," New York Times Op/Ed editor Scott Malcolmson examines our country's racial history through history, literature, and memoire. In his lecture, Malcolmson criticizes the stereotype of the "racist South" and "progressive North," and reveals how even academics at Yale University promoted segregation of the races. Furthermore, Malcolmson argues that race is not "real," that it is social instead of biological, and that it was often scholars like Locke who promoted the social separation of Africans and Caucasians. He therefore urges Americans to face the truth, that many of our heroes have been glorified in our history books, when in fact, too many of them held views and practices that we would now consider abhorrent. |
| Mann,
Eric |
Fall 2003 |
|
2 |
VHS |
|
More Information » |
Fighting Back Against the Empire
In the fall of 2003, civil-rights activist Eric Mann, a leader of the Bus Riders' Union in California, came to speak to Miami University at the same time of the worker strike. His organization, a self-described "grassroots, militant, multi-racial organization that believes you change things through none of the branches of government," but through direct action of independent working class politics. In this presentation, Mann's goal is to try to engage students in a social revolution despite living in a counter revolution, and questions how we can offer hope to a new generation of organizations when revolutionary politics have been extinguished to the naked eye. He reviews instances in history, such as the Civil Rights Movement, where change did not occur as much from governmental policies and decisions (such as Brown vs. Board of Education) but from the action of the people during the Civil Rights Movement. He also discusses the current environmental crisis, and how this has also been as a result of our culture's apathy. His Bus Union, however, has worked to attain clean fuel and develop auto-free zones, so that they can dramatically try to reduce harmful pollutants. He urges Miami University students to make life changes and decide what one's views are, and asserts that the first point of hope is one's own willingness to fight, and that it begins from a strong ethical, moral and political stance. |
| McRuer, Robert |
March 22, 2007 |
65 minutes |
1 |
DVD/VHS |
|
More Information » |
|
| Met, Myriam |
February 2, 2006 |
80 Minutes |
1 |
VHS |
|
More Information » |
|
| Meisel, Judith - Survival of a Human Spirit |
April 3, 2008 |
- |
1 |
DVD |
|
|
|
| Miami Tribe Pow Wow Etiquette, Dan Labotz |
November 6, 2007 |
- |
1 |
DVD |
|
|
|
| Miami Tribe Pow Wow Etiquette, Tom Weisner |
November 8, 2007 |
- |
1 |
DVD |
|
|
|
| Miami Tribe Pow Wow Etiquette, Mark Hauser |
November 15, 2007 |
- |
1 |
DVD |
|
|
|
| Miami Tribe Pow Wow Etiquette, John Jackson |
February 28, 2008 |
- |
1 |
DVD |
|
|
|
Mitchell, Jerry-
Searching
for Justice |
March
27, 2006 |
80 minutes |
1 |
VHS |
|
More Information » |
|
Mosaic Youth
Theatre of Detroit-
The Tesserae One Act Play Festival |
January 22, 2005 |
|
1 |
VHS |
|
More Information » |
|
| Mosaic Singers |
January 23, 2005 |
120 Minutes |
1 |
VHS |
|
More Information » |
|
| Mosaic Choir |
October 6, 2002 |
80 minutes |
3 |
VHS |
|
More Information » |
|
| Mosaic Singers |
October 12, 2003 |
|
1 |
VHS |
|
More Information » |
|
| Mosaic Youth Theatre |
October 11, 2003 |
|
1 |
VHS |
|
More Information » |
|
Mosaic Youth Theatre -
Heartbeat |
October 5, 2002 |
70 minutes |
1 |
VHS |
|
More Information » |
Founded in 1992, the internationally recognized and award-winning Mosaic Youth Theatre of Detroit is a multicultural arts organization whose mission has been to develop young theatre artists through comprehensive theatrical training and to provide high quality performances for audiences of all ages. HeartBEAT is a sensuous musical about Love, Hate and Rhythm. This play is loosely based on Aristophanes, which intertwines the vibrant languages of classic Greek theatre and the poetry of the street step dance, percussion and song. Bringing forth recollections of the artists' own lives, this play provides moving and humorous accounts of the battles of love and hate these young people and their peers face on a day-to-day basis and how they make meaning of their lives. |
| Musambachime,
Mwelwa |
October 18, 2001 |
65 minutes |
2 |
VHS |
|
More Information » |
Professor Musambachime, also an appointed ambassador of Zambia and once a visiting professor here at Miami University, spoke on Zambia's role in the conflict between Angola and the Democratic Republic of Congo. He spoke of how conflict destroys and retards development. He used the saying, "when two elephants fight, it is the grass that suffers" to describe the insecurity Zambia faces due to the destabilization of its neighbors. He notes that both countries are rich in resources and that the conflict is about the distribution of power. He suggests that diplomacy is one method to resolve the conflicts through peaceful means and only after peace is attained can all the help provided by international organizations truly benefit the citizens of the countries bereaved. Dr. Musambachime also requests assistance for Zambia's government in its aid of those who seek refugee within its borders. |
| Ndulo, Dr. Muna |
September 9, 2004 |
78 minutes |
1 |
VHS |
|
More Information » |
|
| Oh, Angela |
January 25, 2001 |
85 minutes |
2 |
VHS |
|
More Information » |
|
Olds, Julie-
Founding Mothers Series - Cultural
Preservation and Tribal Sovereignty |
March 8, 2006 |
80 minutes |
1 |
VHS |
|
More Information » |
|
Pergram, Chad
-
Student Panel |
September 10, 2002 |
110 minutes |
4 |
VHS |
|
More Information » |
|
Pergram Panel
-
Hey, Kleiman, DeLue
|
September 11, 2002 |
110 minutes |
4 |
VHS |
|
More Information » |
|
| Pieces of Power Symposium |
Ocotber 26, 2007 |
|
1 |
DVD |
|
More Information » |
|
| Poniatowska,
Elena |
September 24, 2001 |
52 minutes |
1 |
VHS |
|
More Information » |
|
Representative
John Lewis-
Freedom Summer Conference |
September 17, 2004 |
90 Minutes |
1 |
VHS |
|
More Information » |
|
Re-Weaving the Maya Identity
-
Bianca Pasquini
Thesis Summary
is available upon request |
2004 |
60 Minutes |
1 |
VHS |
|
|
|
| Robinson, Mary |
|
|
1 |
VHS |
|
More Information » |
|
Social Justice and Human Rights
Day -
Proclamation & Address |
November 15, 2006 |
25 Minutes |
1 |
DVD/VHS |
|
More Information » |
|
Social Justice and Human Rights
Day -
Keynote - Xavier Benavides |
November 15, 2006 |
120 Minutes |
1 |
DVD/VHS |
|
More Information » |
|
Sojourner Truth -
Freedom's
Messenger (Kemba) |
March 7, 2001 |
55 minutes |
1 |
VHS |
|
More Information » |
|
| Steele, Claude |
September 5, 2002 |
95 minutes |
3 |
VHS |
|
More Information » |
|
| Stevens, Claudia |
April 8, 2004 |
80 Minutes |
1 |
VHS |
|
More Information » |
|
Teters, Charlene-
Founding Mothers Series |
April17, 2006 |
80 minutes |
1 |
VHS |
|
More Information » |
|
| Tucker, Marcia |
November 16, 2005 |
80 Minutes |
1 |
VHS |
|
More Information » |
|
UniDiversity -
Latin American Festival Promotion |
2004 |
6 minutes |
1 |
VHS |
|
More Information » |
This promotion is for UniDiversity Latin American Festival. It features footage from the previous festival with the voice of Claudia Lapez, Assistant Director of the Center of American and World Cultures, recounting a wonderful day of llama petting, martial arts, dancing, food, pottery, artifacts and other experiences of Latin American culture. This event was well attended by the community of Oxford as well as the students and faculty of Miami University. |
Vaid, Urvashi -
Sexuality
& Its Discontents |
February 19, 2004 |
120 minutes |
1 |
VHS |
|
More Information » |
|
| Warrior, Della |
April 13, 2006 |
80 minutes |
1 |
VHS |
|
More Information » |
|
| Weekend |
September 26, 2000 |
12 minutes |
2 |
VHS |
|
|
|
"World Echoes"
-
Dedication of MacMillan Hall |
April 1, 2004 |
|
1 |
VHS |
|
|
|
Wouldn't Take Nothin For
My Journey Part 1-
Freedom Summer Conference |
September 18, 2004 |
60 Minutes |
1 |
VHS |
|
More Information » |
|
Wouldn't Take
Nothin For My Journey Part 2-
Freedom Summer Conference |
September 18, 2004 |
60 Minutes |
1 |
VHS |
|
More Information » |
|
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|
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|
 |
|
 |
|