Screen/Society--Documenting the Middle East--"Censored Voices"

Tuesday, January 17, 2017 - 2:00pm to 3:45pm
Screen/Society--Documenting the Middle East--"Censored Voices"

Film Screening:

Censored Voices

(Mor Loushy, 2015, 84 min, Israel/Germany, in Hebrew and English w/ English Subtitles, Color, Digital)

-- Introduced by Prof. Shai Ginsburg (AMES)

 

 

 

On June 5, 1967, the armies of Egypt, Syria, and Jordan amass on Israel's borders, threatening annihilation. Six days later, the war ends with Israel's decisive victory - conquests of Gaza, Sinai, and the West Bank, tripling the tiny country's size. Streets brim with joy, but behind the euphoria and a proud new national narrative of invincibility, are other voices. One week after the war, renowned author Amos Oz audio-records intimate conversations with Israeli soldiers fresh from the battlefield. These provocative tapes, unheard until now, are the core of a startling film about what lies behind the facade of Israel’s most celebrated military victory and the contradictions that arise when a people seeking freedom turn occupier, when David becomes Goliath. The soldiers' harrowing confessions, combined with rare archival footage and evocative sound design, create a sense of stunning immediacy. As they wrestle with the systemic excision of Palestinians, the dehumanizing nature of war, and echoes of the Holocaust, we listen as these men, now almost 50 years older, hear the recordings for the first time, and the past erupts, presciently, into the present.

-- Winner for Best Documentary at Awards of the Israeli Film Academy (2015)!

"Poignant and provocative. Censored Voices unleashed a thoughtful, deeply moving moment in time. Unforgettable." - E. Nina Rothe, Huffington Post

 

 

Censored Voices is a remarkable document that raises important questions about the evolution of modern Israel.” -- Tirdad Derakhshani, Philadelphia Inquirer

 

 

 

Cost: Free and open to the public.

Sponsors: The Duke University Middle East Studies Center (DUMESC), AMES Presents, the Program in the Arts of the Moving Image (AMI), and Duke University Libraries.

White 107 (White Lecture Hall)