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Ghost in the Machine Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Feb-20-08 10:35 PM
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Iraq War: 5 Years and Counting A Series of Films, Lectures and Panel Discussions - Vanderbilt U

http://www.vanderbilt.edu/iraqwarseries /

Iraq War: 5 Years and Counting
A Series of Films, Lectures and Panel Discussions
February - March, 2008
Vanderbilt University
Admission is free and open to the public.


This film series is dedicated to the portrayal of the Iraq War and its
effects in various aspects, contexts and mediums of film.

It is sponsored by the Office of the Dean of Students, Project Dialogue and
the University Lectures Committee with additional support from Film Studies
Program, Philosophy Department, Sarratt Art Studios, Vanderbilt Speakers
Committee, and Vanderbilt Student Communications.

Program Organizers:
David Wood, Centennial Professor of Philosophy
JoEl Logiudice, Director, Office of Arts and Creative Engagement, Office of
the Dean of Students

The Purpose For the Series

In his allegory of the cave, Plato likens ordinary people to prisoners deep
in a cave watching images cast on the far wall by fires burning behind them.
He imagines one man escaping into the daylight and discovering the truth.
Here Plato equates images with darkness and error. And yet where the real is
far away, out of reach, or hidden from view, we can be brought closer to the
truth by images. These movies do not pretend there is a single truth.
Reality is made up of many perspectives, like light flashing through a
prism.

The Iraq War has been described as a War of Liberation, a search for Weapons
of Mass Destruction, a plundering of Iraqi oil, and as the greatest
military/foreign policy blunder in the history of America. And some of these
movies, such as No End in Sight, do not pull any punches in their critical
take on the true motives for the war, the lack of planning, and the
disastrous consequences. On a more human level, there are the views of U.S.
soldiers, Iraqi civilians, the returning vet and close family, and many
others.

One of Plato's objections to the poet in his ideal Republic was that they
might (as Homer did) weaken the impulse to heroism by describing the sordid
realities of death on the battlefield. We, on the other hand, in a more
democratic spirit, rightly think that we need to know the truth in all its
tragic detail to be able to make informed judgments. These movies offer many
eye-opening windows on the war.

--David Wood

The Ground Truth
Tuesday, February 19
7 p.m. in Sarratt Cinema
Film response led by Monica Casper, Director of Women's and Gender Studies,
Associate Professor of Sociology
(2006) Director: Patricia Foulkrod
This insightful documentary film follows young Americans through
recruitment, training, combat in Iraq and their return home. Professor
Casper will discuss the film in terms of masculinity and disability issues.
She will also situate it in the personal context of a recent loss of a
family member in combat. 78 mins

Turtles Can Fly
Saturday, February 23
7 p.m. in Sarratt Cinema
Film response led by Sarah Childress, Graduate Student, English and Film
Studies and Lisa Guenther, Assistant Professor of Philosophy
(2005) Director: Bahman Ghobadi
A well crafted coming-of-age drama set in a Kurdish refugee camp on the
Iraqi-Turkish border on the eve of the invasion of Iraq by the United
States. 98 mins

The War Tapes
Monday, February 25
7 p.m. in Sarratt Cinema
Film response led by Bill Smith, Professor of Psychology
(2006) Director: Deborah Scranton
The first documentary war movie filmed by soldiers themselves gives an
authentic look at the conflict in Iraq as it plays out on the battlefield,
in the barracks and on the home front. 94 mins

The Road to Guantanamo
Thursday, February 28
7 p.m. in The Commons Multipurpose Room 235
Film response led by Frank Wcislo, Dean of Commons, Associate Professor of
History; Michael Bess, Chancellor's Professor of History; Destiny Birdsong,
Graduate Student, English; Yeo Ju, Graduate Student, English; and John
Morrell, Graduate Student, English
(2006) Director: Michael Winterbottom and Mat Whitecross
A riveting first-hand account of three British citizens who were held for
two years at Guantanamo Bay without being charged with a crime. 95 mins

Control Room
Monday, March 10
7 p.m. in Sarratt Cinema
Film response led by Bruce Barry, Professor of Management and Sociology,
Chair of Faculty Senate
(2004) Director: Jehane Noujam
An eye-opening documentary about Al Jazeera, the Arab world's most popular
news outlet and the most profound film to date on how the U.S. government
has manipulated the news coverage in Iraq. 86 mins

Spin: The Art of Selling War
Tuesday, March 11
7 p.m. in Sarratt Cinema
Lecture by Josh Rushing, former U.S. Marine captain, currently a
correspondent at Al Jazerra English, author of Mission Al Jazeera: Build a
Bridge, Seek the Truth, Change the World
When the United States invaded Iraq, Texas Marine Josh Rushing was posted to
an unconventional battlefield: the U.S. media center in Doha, Qatar. As a
media officer, Rushing was given talking points and soon found himself
providing reporters with the White House spin on the war. In his lecture,
Rushing blends his gripping personal story with fresh insight on the
cultural misunderstandings rampant in the current war on terror.
Immediately following the lecture there will be a Q&A session and a book
signing held in Sarratt lobby.

Iraq in Fragments
Sunday, March 23
7 p.m. in Sarratt Cinema
Film response led by Sara Figal, Assistant Professor of German
(2006) Director: James Longley
An evocative documentary of the war-torn country as seen through the eyes of
Sunnis, Shiites and Kurds. 94 mins

Iraq For Sale: The War Profiteers
Tuesday, March 25
7 p.m. in Sarratt Cinema
Film response led by Bob Barsky, Professor of French and Comparative
Literature and Forrest Perry, Graduate Student, Philosophy
(2006) Director: by Robert Greenwald
In a harrowing 75 minutes, Greenwald takes the viewer inside the lives of
soldiers, truck drivers, widows and children who have been changed forever
as a result of profiteering in the reconstruction of Iraq. 75 mins

No End in Sight
Thursday, March 27
7 p.m. in Sarratt Cinema
Film response led by Dean Masullo, Lecturer, English and American Studies
and Helmut Smith, Martha Rivers Ingram Professor of History
(2007) Director: Charles Ferguson
This methodically edited documentary film chronicles Iraq's descent into
guerilla war, warlord rule, criminality and anarchy. 102 mins

In the Valley of Elah
Sunday, March 30
7 p.m. in Sarratt Cinema
Film response led by Michael Kreyling, Gertrude Conaway Vanderbilt Professor
of English
(2007) Director: Paul Haggis
A fictional drama based on the story of Richard Davis, an Iraq War veteran
murdered after returning home in 2003. The film stars Tommy Lee Jones, Susan
Sarandon and Charlize Theron. 120 mins

http://www.vanderbilt.edu/iraqwarseries /


Just in case anyone in the area is interested...


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PsciStudent Donating Member (14 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Mar-11-08 11:42 PM
Response to Original message
1. Impact symposium
Don't forget about the impact symposium on the Iraq/Middle east situation next week.
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