Please see our Thursday and Friday programs, too!
A Film Festival and Conference
April 11-13, 2019
This three-day film festival explores changing representations of blackness in French cinema through a cross-disciplinary approach. The festival will include screenings of different kinds of films from different periods and regions: documentaries, features, and shorts — many of them rarely available in the U.S. Themes will include the legacy of colonial representations of black French people, housing projects, new intimacies across the racial line, and African-Americans in France. Roundtables will bring together directors, actors, and scholars from France and the U.S.
This three-day event, which includes film screenings as well as conference panels, is co-organized by Isabelle Boni-Claverie (French film director, screenwriter, visiting
Film screenings are free of charge and open to the public. Seating is first-come,
Presented by Institute of French Studies and Cinema Studies.
Co-sponsored by the Department of French Literature, Thought, and Culture, the Institute of African American Affairs, the Center for French Language and Cultures.
With the support of NYU’s Office of the Provost – Global Research Initiatives, NYU Center for the Humanities, the Cultural Services of the French Embassy, La Cinémathèque Afrique – Institut Français.
NEW INTIMACIES ACROSS THE RACIAL LINE? – April 13, 2019
Colonization and racial segregation have been associated with violent sexual policies: while black women’s bodies were made available to or raped by white men, white women’s bodies were strictly prohibited to black men. In Melvin Van Peebles’ first film in 1968, the black U.S. army man stationed in post-colonial France
Screening 1 – 10:30AM-12:00PM
Location: NYU Cantor Film Center, 36 East 8th Street. New York, NY 10003.
A Nous Deux France (Let’s Measure Up, France!),
First screening ever in the USA. Followed by Q&A.
Screening 2 – 12:00-2:00 PM
Location: NYU Cantor Film Center, 36 East 8th Street. New York, NY 10003.
The Story of a Three-Day Pass,
Followed by Q&A.
Screening 3 and panel discussion - 2:30-6:00 PM
Location: NYU Cantor Film Center, 36 East 8th Street. New York, NY 10003.
Pour la Nuit, short film by Isabelle Boni-Claverie, 2004 (26 min.)
Mon
Panel: Forbidden for black men and white women, limited to white men and black women, sexual and romantic relationships between Black and Whites during the colonial era reflected gender- and race-based domination. How has the end of colonization affected these strict rules? Does interracial sex signal the end of
Moderated by Frédéric Viguier (NYU). With Cécile Bishop (NYU), Isabelle Boni-Claverie (screenwriter and film director), Sandrine Collard (Rutgers)