Frank Wilderson: Reparations… Now
Frank Wilderson from Reparations… Now 2015, © Frank Wilderson
Reparations…Now, a work in progress, captures the terror of unnamable loss shouldered by today’s descendents of slaves. It is a documentary with an audio track consisting of interviews statements, and direct address from Blacks as they reflect on issues associated with the dilemma of slavery and its ramifications in the 20th/21st century. These interviews are cross-cut with still photography and swaths of the director’s monologue: segments from his memoir Incognegro, a book about the psychic and political wounds of a middle class Black family that descended from the White Castle Plantation in Louisiana (now an “historic site”: combination bed-and-breakfast resort). Reparations…Now is predicated on the argument that slavery did not end in 1865. The poetic argument of the film is that, even in the 21st century, the coherence of the world is still contingent upon by the necessity of Black enslavement. Anthony Harvey’s film Dutchman (1966) after Amiri Baraka’s often-quoted theater piece of the same title features the struggle for significance of being black in a world facing the impact of slavery, segregation and the linked violence. Taking into consideration ongoing police violence, the growing force of racism worldwide, and the work of counter movements like Black Lives Matter connections become visible between Dutchman and core issues of afro-pessimism.
Program
Anthony Harvey, Dutchman, 1966, 55 min
Frank Wilderson, Reparations…Now, 2005, 23 min
Presented by Janine Jembere and Belinda Kazeem-Kamiński, followed by a Q&A with Frank Wilderson
The event will be in English